Mada za sehemu hiiRespond appropriately in a familiar communicative contextMada 2
- Identify main points in conversations
- Respond to compliments, apologies, wishes and sympathy messages
Identifying the Main Point in What You Hear
When you listen to a conversation or a story, the main point is the most important idea the speaker wants you to understand. Supporting ideas are smaller details that help explain or prove the main point. Your task is to listen carefully and decide what the speaker is talking about most.
- Listen carefully to the whole conversation or story first.
- Ask yourself: What is the speaker talking about? What is the big idea?
- Look for repeated ideas — the speaker usually returns to the main point several times.
- Ignore small details like names, numbers, or places unless they are very important.
- Check your understanding by asking: If I tell someone what this is about in one sentence, what would I say?
- Main idea: The big message or the heart of the conversation.
- Supporting details: Small facts that explain the main idea.
Using the story "Road accident" from your textbook:
Story summary: Last week, I visited my aunt in a nearby district. On the way, our bus stopped suddenly. We saw four people getting off the bus. A schoolboy was lying on the road. He was hurt badly. A car had hit him while crossing the road. Next to him was a school bag. A man opened it and found an exercise book. On the cover, the name "Baraka Musa" was written. Inside the book, there was a phone number. The man called Baraka's father. Baraka's father came quickly in a taxi. They took Baraka to hospital. Later, we heard that Baraka got better and he was discharged.
Identifying the main point:
The main point of this story is: A schoolboy was hit by a car and rushed to hospital.
Supporting details that help explain this main point:
- The boy's name was Baraka Musa.
- A man found Baraka's phone number in his school bag.
- Baraka's father came in a taxi and took him to the hospital.
Notice that the main point tells us what the whole story is about. The supporting details give us more information, but they are not the most important idea.
When you listen to any conversation or story, ask:
- Who is the story about?
- What happened?
- What is the most important thing the speaker wants me to remember?
- Do not rush to decide on the main point. Listen to everything first.
- If there are multiple choices, ask which one covers the largest part of the conversation.
- Remember: the main point answers the question "What is this mostly about?"
In Tanzania, you use this skill every day. For example, when your mwalimu gives you instructions for a class project, you must identify the main point — what you need to do first, second, and last — so you complete the task correctly. If you only remember small details but miss the main point, you might do the wrong thing. Similarly, when someone tells you news about a school event or a market price, identifying the main point helps you understand and remember the most important information.
Swali
What is the main idea of the 'Road accident' story?
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