Understanding and Teaching the Pronunciation of English.pdf

(Greg DeLong) #1
dictations to check students’ comprehension of individual
sounds, words, and reduced forms.

When teaching grammar: Keep the pronunciation of
grammar forms in mind as you teach—both sounds and
intonation patterns—and give students practice in using new
grammar with appropriate pronunciation.



  • When we think of the connection between grammar and
    sound, the pronunciation of -s and -ed endings comes to
    mind immediately. When you teach these grammatical
    endings, be sure to emphasize the three sound forms of
    each and give students plenty of practice in using them in
    speaking. Don’t let students confuse sound patterns with
    spelling patterns, since both of these are a little complex
    and follow separate rules.

  • When teaching grammatical structures that have common
    reduced forms, like going to for future time, modals
    followed by have (should have > shoulda, would have >
    woulda, could have > coulda), or expressions with to
    (like want to > wanna, have to > hafta), be sure students
    know and practice the sounds of the reduced forms.
    When giving examples, try not to pronounce them too
    slowly and precisely; this will only give students a false
    idea of what the forms will sound like in real life. (See
    the end of Chapter 9 for lists of common reduced forms.)

    • In teaching the a#rmative and negative pair can and
      can’t, be sure to point out the usual di"erences in stress
      and vowel clarity. A similar di"erence in stress occurs
      with pairs like are and aren’t, were and weren’t,
      although the vowels in these don’t change.

    • When teaching the formation of questions (yes/no, WH-,
      or tag questions), be sure students know and use
      appropriate intonation patterns for each type. For
      commands and requests, illustrate the di"erence that
      intonation can make in the tone and feeling of these
      forms.

    • Finally, include some listening practice with the sounds
      of new grammatical forms. It’s not enough for students to
      learn to use grammar themselves—they also need to
      recognize it when someone else uses it. Practice by
      letting students listen to sentences using the forms they’re
      learning and identify whether they’re present or past
      tense, a#rmative or negative, and so forth.




Teaching pronunciation in a large class
In an ideal world, all language classes would be small, and
teachers would have plenty of time to give individual
attention to each student’s pronunciation. However, this is
often not the case. How can we teach pronunciation in a
large class of 30, 40, or more students?
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