Title: LCD720
1LCD720 03/25/08
- Phonology and speech perception
2Announcements
- Midterm
- Looking ahead
- Next four weeks Interfaces
- Last two weeks Implementation
- May 20 Final paper due (and last class!)
- Final paper
- Lesson plan justification of the plan (paper)
- Start thinking about a topic now
- Guidelines and grading rubric are on Blackboard
please review soon
3Announcements
- Homework assignments
- Ungraded assignments for April 22 and 29
- Dont need to hand in
- Graded homework assignment due on May 6
(available on April 29) - Hand in in class or on Blackboard
4Interfaces, or How pronunciation is involved in
other parts of language knowledge and skills
- Listening perception
- Grammar
- Orthography (spelling)
Today
5Importance of perception in acquisition of
phonology
- Remember Listening discrimination is an
important first step in acquiring correct
pronunciation (both segmental and suprasegmental
features) - If students dont hear the difference between
sleep and slip, they cant produce the difference
either - Similar for word stress and sentence intonation
6Importance of phonology for listening (perception)
- Listening discrimination is also crucial for
developing listening skills - Identifying phonemes, word stress and intonation
correctly - Sleep vs. slip thirty vs. thirteen statement
vs. question - Segmenting the speech stream correctly into words
and phrases
7How do native speakers listen?
- They attend to stress and intonation (strongly
and weakly stressed syllables) - They attend to stressed vowels
- They segment speech and find words that
correspond to the stressed vowels and the
consonants next to them - They look for phrases that are compatible with
the stress/intonation patterns in (1) and words
in (3) - These steps may proceed in parallel
- Listeners also use prior knowledge (schemata)
- Example /greydey/
8What is difficult for non-native speakers?
- Each of the steps may pose problems
- Identifying phonemes, word stress, sentence
intonation (step 1) - Finding words, esp. unfamiliar words (step 2 and
3) - Finding phrases and grammar (step 4)
- Parallel processing
- This requires automatized processing and
sufficient working memory - Prior knowledge e.g., cultural background
knowledge - Result mishearing or no comprehension
9Assessing students listening difficulties
- Dictation may show some of the students
difficulties - Not hearing unstressed syllables
- Including function words (articles,
prepositions!) and grammatical morphemes - Mishearing unfamiliar words
- Including unknown culturally-related words, like
names of people and places - Incorrect segmentation
- E.g., no in instead of knowing
- Incorrect identification of phonemes
- E.g., /l/ instead of /r/
10What to focus on
- Intonation units and prominence
- Reduced speech
- Function words
- Assimilation
- Contractions
- Ambiguities
- Segmentation
11More examples of reduced function words
- Remember
- him, his, her, them first consonant is dropped
- and, of last consonant is dropped
- can, to, as, or, in, on reduced vowel ?
- will gt /l?/ (syllabic l) and /n?/ (syllabic n)
- What (wi)ll you do?
- Bread (a)n(d) butter
- Combinations of these processes
- have gt /?v/, /v/ or /?/
- of gt /?v/ or /?/
12How did this happen?
- What are the intermediate steps?
- What processes (e.g., reduction, assimilation)
are involved? - dont know /downt now/ gt /d?now/
- might have /mayt hæv/ gt /may??/
- should not have
- /??d n?t hæv/ gt /??dn?t?v/ gt /??dn??/
13More examples of assimilation
- (have) got to
- have to
- has to
- want to
- going to
- dont know
- should have
- might have
- used to
- shouldnt have
gotta hafta hasta wanna gonna donno/dunno shoulda
mighta usta shouldntve/ shouldna
g??? hæft? hæst? w?n? g?n? d?now ??d? may?? yuwst?
??dn?t?v ??dn??
14More examples of assimilation
- Students can memorize these chunks and practice
identifying them in a spoken text - E.g., they listen to a text, identify the
assimilated forms and write out the full forms - Additional focus on ambiguous assimilated forms
- Emphasize that this is informal speech, and
should not be written
15More examples of contractionsand blendings
- is, has s had, would d
- have ve are re
- will ll not nt
- Students should practice these contractions in
chunks, like Ill, hed, theyre, whos,
wherere, hows, etc. - Practice identify the contractions and write out
the full form - Focus on ambiguous contractions
16Ambiguities due to reduced speech
- What is the full form of these words?
- Use the reduced forms in a sentence
- /?m/
- /?z/
- /?z/
- /s/
- /?/
- /?n/
- /d/
- /w?t??/
him is, his is, as is, has of, have and, in,
on had, would, did what do you, what have you,
what you
17Segmentation difficulties
- Remember linking
- lef/t_arm, fin/d_out
- Joa/n_Elson will sound like Joe_Nelson
- gra/de_A will sound like gray day
- There may be slight differences between the two
members of the pair - Especially in connected speech, these differences
may be difficult to hear
18Segmentation difficulties
- In other pairs, there are greater differences
- nitrate night rate
- my turn might earn
- key punching keep punching
- Native speakers can hear these differences
- ESL learners will need to practice them
What is the difference?
aspiration release
aspiration flapping
length of /p/
19Teaching listening skills (perception)
- Fill-in-the-blanks listening exercises
- Open or multiple choice
- Some basic rules
- Never have a gap in the first sentence
- There should be enough time between the gaps to
fill in the word - Use only familiar words if possible, use a
familiar text - Listen to the text twice before discussing the
answers - Finish by listening to the text again
Why?
20Teaching listening skills (perception)
Why?
- Listening reading
- Listen to the text twice, and check for
comprehension - Listen again and read along
- Repeat until all words, function words, and
morphemes are heard - Listen again without reading,focusing on the
missed or misheard words - How to keep the students attention? Ask new,
simple questions each time they listen
Dont forget
21Teaching listening skills (perception)
- Transcribing (in regular spelling)
- Listen to and transcribe a text containing the
targeted forms (e.g., reduced forms,
assimilation, contractions) - Indicate the reduced/assimilated/contracted forms
and provide their full forms - Listen to the text again
22- What does this exercise focus on?
- Why would this work?
- How can this exercise be improved?
p. 232
23- What does this exercise focus on?
- Why would this work?
- How can this exercise be improved?
p. 233
24Next week
- Read Chapter 8
- Construct a fill-in-the-blanks exercise for
teaching contractions/blendings - Bring to class, and be ready to discuss it
- Bring two copies of the text (empty blanks)