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Journal ArticleDOI

Second Language Accent and Pronunciation Teaching: A Research- Based Approach.

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors call for more research to enhance our knowledge of the nature of foreign accents and their effects on communication, and recommend greater collaboration between researchers and practitioners, such that more classroomrelevant research is undertaken.
Abstract
Empirical studies are essential to improving our understanding of the relationship between accent and pronunciation teaching. However, the study of pronunciation has been marginalized within the field of applied linguistics. As a result, teachers are often left to rely on their own intuitions with little direction. Although some instructors can successfully assist their students under these conditions, many others are reluctant to teach pronunciation. In this article we call for more research to enhance our knowledge of the nature of foreign accents and their effects on communication. Research of this type has much to offer to teachers and students in terms of helping them to set learning goals, identifying appropriate pedagogical priorities for the classroom, and determining the most effective approaches to teaching. We discuss these possibilities within a framework in which mutual intelligibility is the primary consideration, although social ramifications of accent must also be taken into account. We describe several problem areas and identify some misconceptions about pronunciation instruction. In addition, we make suggestions for future research that would address intelligibility, functional load, computer-assisted language learning, and the role of the listener. Finally, we recommend greater collaboration between researchers and practitioners, such that more classroomrelevant research is undertaken.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pronunciation Teaching Practices in Communicative Second Language Classes.

TL;DR: This paper provided longitudinal, corpus-based evidence of actual teacher behaviour with respect to the teaching of second language (L2) pronunciation in a communicative language learning context, using 40 hours of videotaped lessons from three experienced teachers recorded four times at 100-hour increments during the 400-hour programme for grade six (11- to 12-year-olds) francophone learners in Quebec, Canada.
Journal ArticleDOI

Second Language Comprehensibility Revisited: Investigating the Effects of Learner Background

TL;DR: The authors investigated first language (L1) effects on listener judgment of comprehensibility and accentedness in second-language (L2) speech and found that comprehensibility was associated with several linguistic variables (segmentals, prosody, fluency, lexis, grammar, and discourse).
Journal ArticleDOI

How Well do General-Skills ESL Textbooks Address Pronunciation?

TL;DR: This article examined 12 ESL general-skills textbook series (48 texts in total) and six accompanying teachers' manuals to determine to what extent these popular books include pro- nunciation activities and how consistent the texts are across individual series.
Journal Article

The Effects of Computer-assisted Pronunciation Readings on ESL Learners’ Use of Pausing, Stress, Intonation, and Overall Comprehensibility

TL;DR: Results from the statistical tests revealed that the treatment had a significant effect on learners’ perception of pausing and word stress and controlled production of stress, even with limited time spent practicing CPRs in a self-directed environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of Rater Characteristics and Prosodic Features of Speaker Accentedness on Ratings of International Teaching Assistants' Oral Performance.

TL;DR: The authors investigated the extent to which raters' background characteristics and instrumentally measured prosodic indices of speakers' accentedness jointly influenced the rating of oral performances, and found that the degree of fidelity between ratings of oral performance and objectively observable prosodic indicators of attentedness correlated with trait-relevant variance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The role of consciousness in second language learning

TL;DR: Schmidt as mentioned in this paper presented on the role of consciousness in second language learning at the 1988 Second Language Research Forum (SLRF) held in at the University of Hawai'i, USA.
Book

How Languages Are Learned

TL;DR: The authors presenta algunas de las investigaciones sobre la adquisicion del lenguaje que le ayudaran not only a evaluar los materiales existentes, sino tambien a adaptarlos and usarlos de una manera that se ajuste a lo que actualmente entendemos sobre como se aprenden los idiomas.
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Teaching and Learning in the Language Classroom

Tricia Hedge
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a framework for teaching and learning languages in a multi-generative system and develop the language-specific skills of the students involved in the learning process.
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A Framework for Task-Based Learning

TL;DR: The framework for classroom use and photocopiable Focus Pages for use in teacher training sessions shows how the framework can be used to plan lessons.
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Trending Questions (1)
Do we need to teach the correct accent?

Yes, teaching the correct accent is important for effective communication and should be based on research findings.