Teaching Pronunciation Fiona Elsted. What do we teach when we teach pronunciation? Features of Pronunciation Sounds (Phonemes) =Consonants (Voiced and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Scenario 12: Giving instructions
Advertisements

ELİF KALINTAŞ AYŞEGÜL DÖNMEZ. CONTENTS What is pronunciation? What is pronunciation teaching? Why to teach pronunciation? What to know to teach? Pronunciation.
Phonology, part 7: Rule Types + Ordering
You CAN SPEAK English BETTER.
English Pronunciation Hilton1 Lecture 5 Lecture 5 (last, but not least) English "Prosody" or Phrasing (Putting It All Together)
Teaching Pronunciation
Unit 6 Teaching Pronunciation
Rhythm Stress, intonation and connected speech forms.
Research on teaching and learning pronunciation
Chapter three Phonology
Topic: Learning and teaching activities
Making pronunciation exercises more meaningful. Session agenda Why teach pronunciation? Connected speech / suprasegmental features Rhythm Stress Intonation.
Teaching Pronunciation to Adult Learners of Foreign Languages Robin Worth, PhD WISLI Pedagogy Workshop June 8, 2011.
By
Advanced Spoken English
Teaching Pronunciation
Pronouncing American ENGLISH Sounds, Stress, and Intonation By Gertrude F. Orion Presented by Tamami Hirai.
TEACHING PRONUNCIATION English in the 21 st Century & How to Teach Segmentals.
The Description of Speech
ACE TESOL Diploma Program – London Language Institute OBJECTIVES You will understand: 1. A process for teaching the receptive and productive sides of pronunciation.
English Language Teaching: An Overview. Overview Visual Aids Prepared Participation Comprehension Checks 3-Part Vocab Lesson Dealing with Mixed Abilities.
Ha ʊ t ɘ ti: ʧ pr ɘˌ nnsı ʹ j eı ʃɘ n Why it seems to be so hard to teach And so hard to learn.
Targeting Pronunciation textbook Miller, S. F. (2006). Targeting pronunciation: Communicating clearly in English. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.
Teaching Pronunciation
 Focus on the auditory feature of words. › When the student is asked to blend the sound of a word together or to identify the individual sounds in a.
Teaching a pronunciation short course Jacky Springall AMEP consortium day.
Total physical response in teaching multicultural classes and (very) young learners Ana-Alina Asaftei Ichim, teacher of English and French.
2013 Fall Semester- Week 8. Introduction 1. Goal of instruction: Language acquisition must be a procedure whereby people use their own thinking processes,
ESP COURSE ( English for Specific Purposes) for Class Teachers (3-4, 5-6) Vera Savic, MA Lecturer in English Faculty of Education in Jagodina University.
Aims of session Making reading fun Early reading Developing reading
Pronunciation Targets. Target 1 Word Stress English speech can be hard to understand if you stress, or emphasize the wrong syllable in a word. COMmunication.
Pronunciation done by Khawla Abdulla latifa Humaid pronunciation done by Khawla Abdulla latifa Humaid
Teaching Speaking Zhang Lu.
Have you ever had to correct a student? What happened? How did you feel? What did you expect from the student? Do you remember when you were corrected.
Acoustic Properties of Taiwanese High School Students ’ Stress in English Intonation Advisor: Dr. Raung-Fu Chung Student: Hong-Yao Chen.
Mistakes and their correction Презентация выполнена учителем английского языка МОУ СОШ № 21 города Ставрополя Борисенко Валентиной Борисовной.
II. LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION DOMAIN I can answer questions and talk with my teacher and friends. I can follow directions. Listening Comprehension Skill.
Chapter 2 Chapter 2 Teaching Pronunciation. I why teach pronunciation? 1. Inaccurate production of a phoneme or inaccurate use of suprasegmental elements.
A Study of Taiwanese High School Students' Production and Perception Performance in English Non-High Front Vowels Graduate Student: Wan-chun Tseng Advisor:
English Phonetics 许德华 许德华. Objectives of the Course This course is intended to help the students to improve their English pronunciation, including such.
TEACHING PRONUNCIATION Teaching Suprasegmentals. Word Stress A stressed syllable is…
Warm up: Part 1 speaking Before we practice, we will look at some model answers Class 3.
The Audiolingual Method
ACE TESOL Diploma Program – London Language Institute OBJECTIVES You will understand: 1. Accent reduction techniques to use with your students You will.
A poor surgeon hurts one person at a time. A poor teacher hurts Dr Ernest L Boyer In People,17 Mar.
Let’s talk about timing How important is timing in –reading exercises? –writing exercises? –listening exercises? –speaking exercises? What about handouts?
TEACHING PRONUNCIATION
PRONUNCIATION PRACTICE  40-minute expositions  20 minutes to show your research and provide examples using PPT, PREZI presentations, Youtube videos,
Outline  I. Introduction  II. Reading fluency components  III. Experimental study  1) Method and participants  2) Testing materials  IV. Interpretation.
Antar Abdellah. What is speaking? Producing comprehendible sounds.
Introduction to Teaching Pronunciation UCI Extension TEFL Programs TEFL Workshop Marla Yoshida
Objectives of session By the end of today’s session you should be able to: Define and explain pragmatics and prosody Draw links between teaching strategies.
English Banana.com Website: Skype: matt.purland iTunes:
Building awareness and concern for pronunciation by Joanne Kenworthy - Teaching English Pronunciation FONETICA Y FONOLOGIA II - ALEXANDRA NAIR ZUÑIGA.
TKT Tutoring Class Phonology.
11 How we organize the sounds of speech 12 How we use tone of voice 2009 년 1 학기 담당교수 : 홍우평 언어커뮤니케이션의 기 초.
Unit 10 Strong forms & weak forms. Strong forms & Weak forms Strong forms: stressed forms Strong forms: stressed forms Weak forms: unstressed forms (schwa.
Revisiting common errors Tutor: Prof. Cecilia A. Zemborain Student: Ma. De los Ángeles Svidersky.
Making yourself understood is not all about accent.
Dr. Dolores Fernández Gavela
Teaching pronunciation
Greenhills Primary Literacy Workshop
What are suprasegmentals?
Introduction English Pronunciation: Connected speech Elision: losing sounds Linking: adding or joining sounds between.
Numbers, colours and alphabets
Phonetics & Phonology John Corbett: USP-CAPES International Fellow
 
Teaching prominence through kazoos
Let’s Think in English KS2
Presentation transcript:

Teaching Pronunciation Fiona Elsted

What do we teach when we teach pronunciation? Features of Pronunciation Sounds (Phonemes) =Consonants (Voiced and Unvoiced) Vowels (Single (short and long) and Diphthongs) Suprasegmental Features Intonation Stress=Word stress, Sentence Stress And resultant Rhythm and Sounds in Connected Speech (assimilation, elision, linking and intrusion, juncture)

Assimilation He’s a very good boy. I’ve been going out too much lately. I went to Liverpool last year. Elision We went to Preston the next day Linking and intrusion I agree I saw it last night Juncture I scream, you scream we all scream for ice-cream Can I have more ice?/Can I have more rice? Examples Adapted from Kelly, G., (2000) How to Teach Pronunciation PearsonLongman

English-a stress-timed language What has happened to Lulu, mother? What has happened to Lu? There's nothing in her bed but an old rag-doll And by its side a shoe. Why is her window wide, mother, The curtain flapping free, And only a circle on the dusty shelf Where her money-box used to be? Why do you turn your head, mother, And why do tear drops fall? And why do you crumple that note on the fire And say it is nothing at all? “What has happened to Lulu” by Charles Causley

What’s happening here? Stressed-timed (isochronous) languages ‘stresses occur at regular intervals within connected speech...and the duration of an utterance is more dependent upon the number of stresses than the number of syllables. To achieve the regular stress intervals, unstressed syllables are made shorter, and the vowels often lose their ‘pure’ quality..’ Kelly, G., (2000) How to Teach Pronunciation Pearson Longman

Questionnaire Adapted from: Thornbury, S., 2001 About Language CUP

Adult learners of English are unlikely to achieve native-like proficiency with regard to pronunciation. Why might it be difficult for adult learners to achieve ‘native-like proficiency’ in pronunciation? What is ‘native-like proficiency’ in relation to pronunciation? Voices/021M-C1190X0043XX-0901V0http://sounds.bl.uk/Accents-and-dialects/BBC- Voices/021M-C1190X0043XX-0901V0 Voices/021M-C1190X0016XX-0201V0http://sounds.bl.uk/Accents-and-dialects/BBC- Voices/021M-C1190X0016XX-0201V0

Echttp:// Ec

Intelligibility should be the main aim of pronunciation teaching ‘Comfortable intelligibility’ Who judges this? What about those who strive for perfection?

Stress, rhythm and intonation are more important than getting the individual sounds right. ‘Without a threshold level mastery of the English prosodic system, no amount of drilling individual sounds will increase intelligibility. As one teacher trainee put it after the training course, ‘Practicing pronunciation without prosody is like teaching ballroom dancing-- only the students must stand still, practice without a partner, and do it all without music’.’Gilbert, J., 2010 Pronunciation as Orphan: What can be done? As We Speak, newsletter of TESOL SPLIS, l/booklets/Gilbert-Teaching-Pronunciation.pdf

Pronunciation should be integrated into other activities rather than taught as a separate system. Pronunciation teaching should start with listening Looking at materials in pairs: Material 1-The exercises are not in their original order. Work together to reconstruct the order. What is the aim of each exercise. What do you think about this sequence? Have you taught pronunciation in a similar way?

The model here: Recognition Discrimination Production Is this the only way though? Advantages of Production first, then listening, then speaking again (Like Task-Teach-Task.)

More materials How do published materials do it? In pairs look at the examples of published materials provided. -What approach to pronunciation teaching is taken? -Is it effective? -Would it work with your students?

Dealing with pronunciation errors on the spot o Facial expression: frowning, grimacing etc. o Asking for repetition: "Again, please“ o Echoing: (with a questioning intonation) o Denial: "Wrong answer“ o Questioning: "Is that correct?“ o Visual aid: snake picture for third person “-s” o Checking that others have understood: ‘Did you understand that?’ ‘What did she say?’ Desmond Thomas 2011

How to correct 1.Self-correction by student 2. Peer correction (open invitation to class) 3. Peer correction (specified individuals/in pairs) 4. Teacher corrects student (immediate) 5. Teacher corrects student (delayed) 6. Teacher supplies prompts to help student 7. Teacher and class correct a series of errors 8. Open discussion (round-up) at end of class.

Students should be taught to read phonemic symbols and use the phonemic chart

I enjoy teaching pronunciation and have some techniques for supporting it in the classroom Mirrors Kazoos DA-da-da Lip-synch Drawing on the right side of the brain: backward chain drilling Exaggeration Physicality Jazz chants Poetry

What is difficult about teaching pronunciation? Tends to be reactive rather than planned because teachers are unsure how to deal with it Good materials are lacking-pronunciation seen as the ‘poor relation’ Phonology has often been taught as a ‘science’ with lots of theory and this can be scary for teachers (and students) The specific terminology associated with pronunciation alienates some teachers What do you think?