Effects of Instruction on the Development of Intelligible Pronunciation in Japanese EFL Classrooms: What and how to teach?

Similar documents
To appear in The TESOL encyclopedia of ELT (Wiley-Blackwell) 1 RECASTING. Kazuya Saito. Birkbeck, University of London

English Language and Applied Linguistics. Module Descriptions 2017/18

INTERACTIVE ALIGNMENT: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE TEACHING AND LEARNING OF SECOND LANGUAGE PRONUNCIATION

Why PPP won t (and shouldn t) go away

The Acquisition of English Intonation by Native Greek Speakers

Language Acquisition Chart

DEPARTMENT OF JAPANESE LANGUAGE AND STUDIES

REVIEW OF CONNECTED SPEECH

Different Task Type and the Perception of the English Interdental Fricatives

Mandarin Lexical Tone Recognition: The Gating Paradigm

International Conference on Education and Educational Psychology (ICEEPSY 2012)

Running head: METACOGNITIVE STRATEGIES FOR ACADEMIC LISTENING 1. The Relationship between Metacognitive Strategies Awareness

Florida Reading Endorsement Alignment Matrix Competency 1

Demonstration of problems of lexical stress on the pronunciation Turkish English teachers and teacher trainees by computer

Universal contrastive analysis as a learning principle in CAPT

Assessment System for M.S. in Health Professions Education (rev. 4/2011)

THE ACQUISITION OF INFLECTIONAL MORPHEMES: THE PRIORITY OF PLURAL S

Introduction to the Common European Framework (CEF)

Linguistics. The School of Humanities

Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 146 ( 2014 )

ACCOMMODATING WORLD ENGLISHES IN DEVELOPING EFL LEARNERS ORAL COMMUNICATION

The Effect of Discourse Markers on the Speaking Production of EFL Students. Iman Moradimanesh

Textbook Evalyation:

International Journal of Foreign Language Teaching & Research Volume 5, Issue 20, Winter 2017

Did they acquire? Or were they taught?

1. REFLEXES: Ask questions about coughing, swallowing, of water as fast as possible (note! Not suitable for all

Table of Contents. Introduction Choral Reading How to Use This Book...5. Cloze Activities Correlation to TESOL Standards...

Speech Recognition at ICSI: Broadcast News and beyond

Handbook for Graduate Students in TESL and Applied Linguistics Programs

Linguistics 220 Phonology: distributions and the concept of the phoneme. John Alderete, Simon Fraser University

Program Matrix - Reading English 6-12 (DOE Code 398) University of Florida. Reading

Revisiting the role of prosody in early language acquisition. Megha Sundara UCLA Phonetics Lab

Effect of Word Complexity on L2 Vocabulary Learning

Spoken English, TESOL and Applied Linguistics

CEFR Overall Illustrative English Proficiency Scales

Learning and Retaining New Vocabularies: The Case of Monolingual and Bilingual Dictionaries

Laporan Penelitian Unggulan Prodi

Fix Your Vowels: Computer-assisted training by Dutch learners of Spanish

Analyzing Linguistically Appropriate IEP Goals in Dual Language Programs

**Note: this is slightly different from the original (mainly in format). I would be happy to send you a hard copy.**

Teaching Global English with NNS-NNS Online Communication

Pobrane z czasopisma New Horizons in English Studies Data: 18/11/ :52:20. New Horizons in English Studies 1/2016

The Effects of Strategic Planning and Topic Familiarity on Iranian Intermediate EFL Learners Written Performance in TBLT

Metacognition and Second/Foreign Language Learning

raıs Factors affecting word learning in adults: A comparison of L2 versus L1 acquisition /r/ /aı/ /s/ /r/ /aı/ /s/ = individual sound

Phonemic Awareness. Jennifer Gondek Instructional Specialist for Inclusive Education TST BOCES

English for Life. B e g i n n e r. Lessons 1 4 Checklist Getting Started. Student s Book 3 Date. Workbook. MultiROM. Test 1 4

University of New Orleans

Quarterly Progress and Status Report. Voiced-voiceless distinction in alaryngeal speech - acoustic and articula

The Journey to Vowelerria VOWEL ERRORS: THE LOST WORLD OF SPEECH INTERVENTION. Preparation: Education. Preparation: Education. Preparation: Education

Phonetic imitation of L2 vowels in a rapid shadowing task. Arkadiusz Rojczyk. University of Silesia

Lower and Upper Secondary

Perceived speech rate: the effects of. articulation rate and speaking style in spontaneous speech. Jacques Koreman. Saarland University

L1 Influence on L2 Intonation in Russian Speakers of English

Journal of Phonetics

21st Century Community Learning Center

Children need activities which are

Colloque: Le bilinguisme au sein d un Canada plurilingue: recherches et incidences Ottawa, juin 2008

Creating Travel Advice

Assessing speaking skills:. a workshop for teacher development. Ben Knight

Rachel E. Baker, Ann R. Bradlow. Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA

CELTA. Syllabus and Assessment Guidelines. Third Edition. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations 1 Hills Road Cambridge CB1 2EU United Kingdom

Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 98 ( 2014 ) International Conference on Current Trends in ELT

EQuIP Review Feedback

Second Language Acquisition in Adults: From Research to Practice

Vicente Amado Antonio Nariño HH. Corazonistas and Tabora School

Conversation Task: The Environment Concerns Us All

An Investigation of Native and Non-Native English-Speaking Teachers' Cognitions about Oral Corrective Feedback

Artwork and Drama Activities Using Literature with High School Students

THE EFFECTS OF TASK COMPLEXITY ALONG RESOURCE-DIRECTING AND RESOURCE-DISPERSING FACTORS ON EFL LEARNERS WRITTEN PERFORMANCE

Rhythm-typology revisited.

A Cross-language Corpus for Studying the Phonetics and Phonology of Prominence

CONTENT KNOWLEDGE IN TEACHER EDUCATION: WHERE PROFESSIONALISATION LIES

The Effect of Written Corrective Feedback on the Accuracy of English Article Usage in L2 Writing

INTERNATIONAL ENGLISH PROGRAMS INFORMATION BOOKLET UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO NEW COLLEGE

282 About the Authors

The Use of Drama and Dramatic Activities in English Language Teaching

PEDAGOGICAL GRAMMAR COURSES OFFERED BY MATESOL PROGRAMS IN FLORIDA

Individual Differences & Item Effects: How to test them, & how to test them well

Phonological and Phonetic Representations: The Case of Neutralization

Eli Yamamoto, Satoshi Nakamura, Kiyohiro Shikano. Graduate School of Information Science, Nara Institute of Science & Technology

The Perception of Nasalized Vowels in American English: An Investigation of On-line Use of Vowel Nasalization in Lexical Access

RED 3313 Language and Literacy Development course syllabus Dr. Nancy Marshall Associate Professor Reading and Elementary Education

SEGMENTAL FEATURES IN SPONTANEOUS AND READ-ALOUD FINNISH

Monticello Community School District K 12th Grade. Spanish Standards and Benchmarks

L1 and L2 acquisition. Holger Diessel

The influence of metrical constraints on direct imitation across French varieties

This content downloaded from on Mon, 28 Sep :21:31 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Integrating Grammar in Adult TESOL Classrooms

Text and task authenticity in the EFL classroom

Spanish III Class Description

CLASSIFICATION OF PROGRAM Critical Elements Analysis 1. High Priority Items Phonemic Awareness Instruction

MERRY CHRISTMAS Level: 5th year of Primary Education Grammar:

DIBELS Next BENCHMARK ASSESSMENTS

Techniques Used by Teachers in Correcting Students Oral Errors in an Omani Boys School

Integrating Common Core Standards and CASAS Content Standards: Improving Instruction and Adult Learner Outcomes

Vowel Alternations and Predictable Spelling Changes

Building Vocabulary Knowledge by Teaching Paraphrasing with the Use of Synonyms Improves Comprehension for Year Six ESL Students

English for teachers of EFL Toward a holistic description

I UNDERSTOOD YOU, BUT THERE WAS THIS PRONUNCIATION THING : L2 PRONUNCIATION FEEDBACK IN ENGLISH/FRENCH TANDEM INTERACTIONS

Transcription:

Effects of Instruction on the Development of Intelligible Pronunciation in Japanese EFL Classrooms: What and how to teach? Kazuya Saito Email: k.saito@bbk.ac.uk Web: http://kazuyasaito.net/

(1) Background Organization (2)What to teach? Which pronunciation features are relatively important to attain L2 comprehensibility and intelligibility? (3)How to teach? How should we help L2 students achieve such comprehensible pronunciation in the most effective/efficient manner?

Overview: How to conceptualize, define and measure L2 pronunciation (since 1990)? Tracey Derwing Murray Munro Jennifer Jenkins John Levis James Flege

Adult L2 speech learning: Review Many L2 learners perceive attaining nativelike pronunciation as an idealized goal (especially in EFL classrooms). Many scholars have questioned whether nativelikeness actually matters in real-life situations (e.g., Derwing, 2003 for ESL; Tokumoto & Shibata, 2011 for EFL)

Adult L2 speech learning: Review English continues to serve as a lingua franca in many academic and business settings all over the world. Most of the English users are actually nonnativespeakers. (e.g., Jenkins, 2002; Levis, 2005)

Adult L2 speech learning: Review Few non-native speakers demonstrate perfect proficiency in all aspects of L2 (like monolinguals do). Many successful non-native speakers can be accented but highly comprehensible. (e.g., Abrahamsson & Hyltenstam, 2009; Flege, Munro, & MacKay, 1995)

Adult L2 speech learning: Review It is important to set a realistic goal for adult L2 speech learning. Nativelikness vs. Comprehensibility (e.g., Derwing & Munro, 2009; Isaacs & Trofimovich, 2012; Jenkins, 2002)

What kinds of methods do L2 speech researchers generally use?

1. Eliciting ESL students extemporaneous speech Please explain an eight-frame Please explain each photo below: cartoon below: (e.g., Derwing & Munro, 1997) (e.g., Saito, 2015)

2. Native and non-native listeners rate accetedness and comprehensibility

9-point Scale Accentedness (nativelikeness) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 (Nativelike Heavily accented ) Little Mid Strong Comprehensibility 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ( Easy to understand Hard to understand) High Mid Low

Derwing & Munro (2009) in Language Teaching Accentendess and comprehensibility are partially independent constructs (p. 488)

Pedagogical implications for pronunciation teaching (Levis, 2005) NativenessPrinciple (traditional approach) Focusing equallyon all pronunciation features in a L2 To become nativelike Intelligibility Principle (new approach) Focusing selectivelyon certain features affecting comprehensibility/intelligibility To become comprehensible / intelligible

Key references Derwing, T., Munro, M., & Wiebe, G. (1997). Pronunciation instruction for fossilized learners: Can it help? Applied Language Learning, 8, 217 235. Flege, J., Munro, M, & MacKay, I. R. A. (1995). Factors affecting degree of perceived foreign accent in a second language. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 97, 3125 3134. Jenkins, J. (2002). A sociolinguistically based, empirically researched pronunciation syllabus for English as an international language. Applied Linguistics, 23, 83 103. Levis, J. (2005). Changing contexts and shifting paradigms in pronunciation teaching. TESOL Quarterly, 39, 367 377.

Question Which pronunciation problems are relatively affecting successful comprehensibility? Which pronunciation features should be taught as a priority in Japanese EFL classrooms?

Specific pronunciation problems Segmental errors road mispronounced as load Syllable errors Play pleɪ mispronounced as pəleɪ Word stress errors guitar mispronounced as GUItar Intonation errors Can you see it? There are three guys on the stage.

Teachers opinions Saito, K., & van Poeteren, K. (2012). Pronunciation-specific adjustment strategies for intelligibility in L2 teacher talk: Results and implications of a questionnaire study. Language Awareness, 21, 369-385. Saito, K. (2014). Experienced teachers' perspectives on priorities for improved intelligible pronunciation: The case of Japanese learners of English. International Journal of Applied Linguistics, 24, 250-277.

Saito & van Poeteren (2012), Saito (2014) Participants? 120 experienced teachers (> 10 yrs of teaching) Method? Questionnaire/interview Findings? 1.Major segmentals/l, ɹ, ð, θ, v/ 2. Syllable-related problems [schwa vowel insertion] 3. Assimilation /si, ʃi, ti/ 4. Stress/Intonation [sentence/lexical stress, intonation] 5. Secondary segmentals/æ, ʌ, f/

Listeners judgements

Suzukida & Saito (under review) Participants? 40 Japanese learners with varied L2 English proficiency (LOR = 0-40 years in Canada) Method? Their extemporaneous speech (30sec per token) first judged for perceived comprehensibility and then acoustically analyzed for segmental, syllabic and prosodic accuracy

ANOVAs (1 = good, 9 = poor) Low (6.2-8.4) High FL segmentals Syllable (vowel insertion) Low FL segmentals Prosody (word stress, intonation) Mid (3.6-6.0) Syllable (vowel insertion) High FL segmentals High (1.5-3.3) Syllable (vowel insertion) Low FL segmentals Prosody

Question How should we teach L2 pronunciation? Any thoughts for an optimal method (based on research/anecdotal stories)? Explicit phonetic instruction? Contextualized usage of language? Fun and meaningful activities? Useful online tools?

Explicit phonetic instruction Option 1. Perception training Let students hear the acoustic features of target sounds via minimal pair activities! Rock vs. Lock? Read vs. Lead?

Web Materials: English Accent Coach http://www.englishaccentcoach.com/play.aspx

Explicit phonetic instruction Option 2. Articulation training Let students understand the articulatory features of target sounds!

Web Materials: Iowa Uni Phonetic Lab http://soundsofspeech.uiowa.edu/english/english.html

Audiolingual teaching methods vs. L2 pronunciation development

Mcdonald, Power, & Yule (1994) 23 ESL learners 10 key lexical items Elliott (1997) 66 English learners of Spanish 19 Spanish allophones Saito (2011) Research Evidence 20 Japanese learners of English 5 English-specific segmentals (including English /r/ and /l/) Improvement was clear at a controlledspeech level but not at a spontaneousspeechlevel (See also Saito, 2012 for research synthesis)

Key references Lee, J., Jang, J., & Plonsky, L. (2015). The effectiveness of second language pronunciation instruction: A meta-analysis. Applied Linguistics, 36, 345 366. Thomson, R. I., & Derwing, T. M. (2015). The effectiveness of L2 pronunciation instruction: A narrative review. Applied Linguistics, 36, 326 344. Saito, K. (2012). Effects of instruction on L2 pronunciation development: A synthesis of 15 quasi-experimental intervention studies. TESOL Quarterly, 842 854.

Contextualized Instruction to teach L2 pronunciation! Saito, K. (2015). Communicative focus on L2 phonetic form: Teaching Japanese learners to perceive and produce English /r/ without explicit instruction. Applied Psycholinguistics, 36, 377-409. Saito, K. (2013a). The acquisitional value of recasts in instructed second language speech learning: Teaching the perception and production of English /r/ to adult Japanese learners. Language Learning, 63, 499-529.. Saito, K. (2013b). Re-examining effects of form-focused instruction on L2 pronunciation development: The role of explicit phonetic information. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 35, 1-29.

Design (N = 100+) Pre-tests Four 1-hour meaning oriented sessions with communicative focus on English /r/ form Post-tests

Communicative Tasks & Recasts Main Activities Theme: Developing a convincing argument Activity 1. How to critique? Activity 2. English Debating Activity 3. Argument-creation and Public Speech Warm-up Games Activity 4. English Karuta (noticing activities) Activity 5. Guessing Game (awareness activities) Activity 6. English Card Game (awareness activities)

English Debating

Running inside is better than running outside

Excerpt 2 S: In spite of winter weather, I can see run[lan]*ners in Montreal. T: Runners. S: Runners. So, we can get on coat, sweater, more clothes. If you run [lan]*.. T: Run S: If you run, you get warm so you will take care of weather.

Topics for debate activities Which would you prefer, eating rice vs. bread for breakfast? Listening to rock music is not good for children Is it good to have a rainy day? Is a sense of ratrace among students good (e.g., tests, entrance examinations)?

English Karuta

English KARUTA Please pick up the card I am reading! L CL R CR

Excerpt 3 T: Race S1: Yes. T: No S1: Ohh S2: This one! T: Yes! What is this? S2: Race [lace]* T: Race S2: Race

Results Trained items M= 62.4 68.9% (6.5% gain) Untrained items M= 57.7 67.7% (10% gain) The amount of improvement resulting from 4 hr of FFI (6-10% gain) could be comparable to other intensive lab training studies (e.g., Logan et al., 1992, for 8% gain after 10 hr of training). (p. 25)

Results Production Neither /r/ nor /l/ Good/probably /r/ at controlled and spontaneous speech tests A communitive focus on form could be an optimal method to allow students to automatize their new phonetic knowledge.

Key references (FonF in L2 grammar) FonF Ellis, R. (2016). Focus on form: A critical review. Language Teaching Research, 20(3), 405-428. Spada, N., & Tomita, Y. (2010). Interactions between type of instruction and type of language feature: A meta-analysis. Language Learning, 60, 263 308. Corrective feedback (reactive FonF) Lyster, R., Saito, K., & Sato, M. (2013). Oral corrective feedback in second language classrooms. Language Teaching, 46, 1-40.

Conclusion Teaching adultjapanese learners to improve comprehensibilityin English

Set a realistic goal! It is important to set a realistic goal: comprehensibility (using L2 as a non-native speaker) rather than nativelikeness (mastering L2 like a native speaker) Make sure (a) where students currently are; and (b) what they ultimately aim at: Beginner-level Comp Intermediate-level Comp Advanced-level Comp

What to teach? Beginner-level Comp Intermediate-level Comp Initial Stage of L2 Speech Learning High FL segmentals Syllables (schwa vowel insertion) Advanced-level Comp Later Stage of L2 Speech Learning Low FL segmentals Syllables Prosody (word stress, intonation)

How to teach? Explicit instruction Articulatory explanation Perceptual training Communicative activities Focused tasks Input enhancement Recasts

THANK YOU!!