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Pronunciation
What
and why?
Correct
and clear pronunciation is obviously of considerable importance
in language learning. Without it, students may not be understood
and may be poorly perceived by other English speakers. However,
good pronunciation is something which takes time to build up as
there are many factors involved. Students need to hear a lot of
English before they can develop a 'feel' for the sounds of English.
They need to have confidence in their abilities, not feel shy and
be ready to make a fool of themselves as they try to get their tongues
round the different sounds. Pronunciation is thus probably best
dealt with a little at a time and in the context of learning new
words, structures, etc. rather than in isolation.
Practical
ideas
-
In the Listening and Speaking Pack there are Say it clearly!
exercises which focus on pronunciation work.
- It
is better to spend very short periods running through pronunciation
examples and exercises rather than one long session. Perhaps the
same pronunciation exercise could be done in three or four different
lessons for three minutes at a time.
- It
is worth discovering which are the main pronunciation problems
for students of your MOTHER
TONGUE. You can then spend a little time focusing on them.
A little pronunciation practice goes a long way!
- Students
may find stress and intonation practice easier and more interesting
to respond to by doing some jazz chants or clapping as the words
are stressed on the cassette. This can be done in a small group
if they have the cassette recorder or briefly with all the students
together.
- Students
can be encouraged to do pronunciation work at home. If you go
through the Say it clearly! exercises with the students,
you can ask them to practise again at home.
- READING
aloud is a technique which is often used to check pronunciation.
In our experience, however, reading aloud has very little effect
in improving pronunciation. In the classroom, students typically
make more mistakes when they read aloud than they do normally.
It also wastes time for the students who have to listen and places
the teacher in the role of having to correct the reader all the
time. Turning the written word into sounds is quite a separate
process from the production of a word in normal conversation.

Researching
the classroom
- Personality
and background can have a lot of influence on the way students
see themselves as 'English speakers'. This will influence their
pronunciation. Try to identify which of your students have the
clearest pronunciation in English. Can you explain this in terms
of their background or their personality? Do they have certain
things in common? Are they, for example, quiet students or more
extrovert? Have they travelled to English-speaking countries?
Are they musical?
- Some
pronunciation problems may originate in the difference
between sounds in the MOTHER
TONGUE and sounds in English. Is this true with your students?
Can you identify which sounds these are? Try an experiment. Identify
two sounds which you know are very different in English from the
mother tongue or which don't exist in the students' mother tongue.
Give the students explicit practice in one of the sounds but do
not pay any special attention to the other sound. After a few
weeks, judge how well the students use each sound. Does explicit
pronunciation practice always make a difference?

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