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Communication Skills

Lecture 24. Communication Skills. Speaking Skill (Pronunciation). Recap. What is Speaking? What makes a Good Speaker? 30 Tips to improve Public Speaking Strategies for Developing Speaking Skills. WHY learn PRONUNCIATION?. It improves pronunciation and intonation.

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Communication Skills

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  1. Lecture 24 Communication Skills Speaking Skill (Pronunciation)

  2. Recap • What is Speaking? • What makes a Good Speaker? • 30 Tips to improve Public Speaking • Strategies for Developing Speaking Skills

  3. WHY learn PRONUNCIATION? • It improves pronunciation and intonation. • It helps us understand the emotions people want to transmit according to their tone of voice. • It helps us transmit our own emotions when speaking.

  4. WHY learn PRONUNCIATION? • It helps to become more fluent and to speak more natural. • It provides new vocabulary. • It makes us think in the target language. • We learn different accents in the target language.

  5. INTRODUCTION SPEECH – THE ESSENCE OF LANGUAGE ... speech is the basic form of language. This leads to the conclusion that speech should be emphasized in second language teaching ... (Hector Hammerly)

  6. Activity: Homophones! • Writethewordsbeingdictated. • Didyouwritethewords in thesameway? • Somewords in English are pronouncedexactlythesame, butdiffer in Spelling.

  7. Find 14 mistakes in this text.As a buoy , there was nothing I liked more than to spend my time on the beech . There was a good selection of baize as my home was on a peninsula and so it was always possible to find a plaice sheltered from the wind wile enjoying the best of the weather . Each day was a succession of swimming until I was frozen followed by lying on the hot sand until my body was warmed by the son and then it was back to the see again.

  8. Toward the end of the day, as the waters rose over the warm sands, I wood billed a large damn to defy the waives . But , in spite of all my efforts, I almost never one this unequal contest. There was a time when , whether by design or chance, I had placed my castle at the turn of the tied and so it survived the waves only to be beaten down by the feat of holiday-makers as they returned home at the end of the day.

  9. As a buoy boy , there was nothing I liked more than to spend my time on the beech beach . There was a good selection of baize bays as my home was on a peninsula and so it was always possible to find a plaice place sheltered from the wind wile while enjoying the best of the weather . Each day was a succession of swimming until I was frozen followed by lying on the hot sand until my body was warmed by the son sun and then it was back to the see sea again.

  10. Toward the end of the day, as the waters rose over the warm sands, I wood would billed build a large damn dam to defy the waives waves . But , in spite of all my efforts, I almost never one won this unequal contest. There was a time when , whether by design or chance, I had placed my castle at the turn of the tied tide and so it survived the waves only to be beaten down by the feat feet of holiday-makers as they returned home at the end of the day.

  11. 3. Activity: Tongue twisters! • TongueTwisters can be a goodpronunciationpractice! • Howfast can yousaythistonguetwisterwithoutmaking a mistake?

  12. Find 19 mistakes in this text.It was one of those October daze when it was a pleasure to be alive . The sky was blew and the heir cold and sharp with a cent of wet earth as the mourning sun warmed the chilled countryside . And then I court site of a lonely bie struggling to find the pollen of a final flour . Wear had he bean , this sad worker , doomed so soon to dye ? I marvelled at his energy as he climbed along so many bear storks . Finding nothing, he flue on and disappeared from cite . I continued my walk to a country in where , sitting outside , I contentedly sipped my bier , musing all the wile on the mixed fortunes of life .

  13. It was one of those October daze days when it was a pleasure to be alive . The sky was blew blue and the heir air cold and sharp with a cent scent of wet earth as the mourning morning sun warmed the chilled countryside . And then I court caught site sight of a lonely bie bee struggling to find the pollen of a final flour flower . Wear Where had he bean been , this sad worker , doomed so soon to dye die ? I marvelled at his energy as he climbed along so many bear bare storks stalks . Finding nothing, he flue flew on and disappeared from cite sight . I continued my walk to a country in inn where , sitting outside , I contentedly sipped my bier beer , musing all the wile while on the mixed fortunes of life .

  14. Minimal pairs • blessed blast • commended commanded • deft daft • left laughed • lest last • leather lather • pest passed • vest vast

  15. 4. activity: Intonation! • When we communicate, we use words, body language, and intonation. • What do you think is most important? • The teacher will say the same sentence with different intonation. • How does the meaning of the sentence change? • Why is it so important to use intonation?

  16. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION SPELLING INTERFERENCE The higher the spelling inconsistency is, the more negative the influence on pronunciation will be.

  17. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION The English spelling does not serve as a guide to pronunciation. On the contrary, it can often be misleading.

  18. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION EXAMPLE 1 How many possible interpretations are there for the grapheme “oo”? • One • Two • Three • Four • Five

  19. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION “oo” five • //as in boot - // • //as in book - // • //as in blood - // • //as in brooch - // • //as in door - //

  20. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION EXAMPLE 2 How many possible interpretations are there for the vowel grapheme “a”? • Two • Three • Four • Five • Six

  21. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION “a” six • // as in able, make, table, taste • // as in apple, at, cat, past • // as in car, father, park • // as in air, care, chair • // as in awful, ball, law, walk • // as in about, global, island

  22. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION EXAMPLE 3 How many possible interpretations are there for the vowel grapheme “i”? • Two • Three • Four • Five • Six

  23. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION “i” six • // as in elite, machine, pizza, ski • // as in bit, his, in, liquor • // as in bite, night, polite • // as in boy, noise, toilet, void • // as in bird, firm, pencil • /mute/ as in fruit, suitcase, • parliament, sovereignty

  24. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION EXAMPLE 4 How many possible interpretations are there for the vowel grapheme “o”? • One • Two • Three • Four • Five

  25. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION “o” five • // as in global, go, so • // as in dog, off • // as in dot, hot, not • // as in carton, occur, son • // as in do, to

  26. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION EXAMPLE 5 How many different pronunciations are there for the consonant grapheme “ch”? • One • Two • Three

  27. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION “ch” three • //as in check, chocolate, beach • //as in Chicago, machine, chute • //as in chaos, character, ache

  28. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION EXAMPLE 6 In how many different ways can we pronounce the consonant grapheme “s”? • Two • Three • Four • Five

  29. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION “s” five • // as in basic, past, say • // as in because, rose • // as in sugar, sure • // as in casual, usually, television • /mute/ as in aisle, island

  30. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION The frustration of the EFL learner never ends: • bough // • cough // • dough // • rough // • through// • hiccough //

  31. SPELLING VS. PRONUNCIATION Are students of English as a foreign language the only ones that suffer?

  32. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES PHONOLOGY Phonology analyzes the sound patterns of language. Different languages have different phonological systems. A clear understanding of the differences will provide guidance and prevent interference.

  33. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES The main phonological differences between Portuguese and English are: • Phonetic signaling • Phonemes (vowels & consonants) • Phonological rules • Rhythm & vowel reduction • Word stress

  34. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - SIGNALING PHONETIC SIGNALING Phonetic signaling in linguistics is the quantity of sound produced per meaning. Different languages have different levels of phonetic signaling.

  35. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - SIGNALING For example: It takes 1 syllable to say “dog” while it takes 3 syllables to convey the same meaning in Portuguese: “cachorro”.

  36. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - SIGNALING Try it yourself: • Take the syllable as the unit of sound and the word as the unit of meaning. • List a few common words from your surroundings in English and Portuguese. • Add the total number of syllables for each language.

  37. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - SIGNALING Example: mesa (2) livro (2) computador (4) caneta (3) cadeira (3) cachorro (3) cansado (3) trabalho (3) dormir (2) cama (2) ------- 27 table (2) book (1) computer (3) pen (1) chair (1) dog (1) tired (2) work (1) sleep (1) bed (1) ------- 14

  38. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - SIGNALING In other words: It’s as if somebody accustomed to driving his car at 80 km/h on well-marked roads needed to drive a different car under different traffic rules on poorly-marked roads at 120 km/h.

  39. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - VOWEL PHONEMES Problem 1: The English phonemes // and // are very likely to be perceived and produced as Portuguese /i/, thus neutralizing the contrast between words like: beach – bitch bead – bid beat – bit cheap – chip eat – it feel – fill feet – fit heat – hit heel – hill lead – lid leap – lip least – list leave – live meal – mill neat – knit peel – pill reach – rich seat – sit seek – sick sheep – ship sheet – shit sleep – slip steal – still wheel – will

  40. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - VOWEL PHONEMES Sentence practice for problem 1: Please, sit in this seat. /    /

  41. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - VOWEL PHONEMES Problem 2: The English phonemes // and // will be perceived and produced as Portuguese /é/, which is in fact a little closer to English // than //. This will neutralize the contrast between words like: pen – pan said – sad send – sand shell – shall then – than bed – bad beg – bag dead – dad end – and flesh – flash gem – jam head – had lend – land men – man met – mat

  42. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - VOWEL PHONEMES Sentence practice for problem 2: The gem fell in the jam. /     /

  43. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - VOWEL PHONEMES Problem 3: The Portuguese /u/ falls right between English // and //.  As a result, perception and production of these phonemes will follow the single pattern of Portuguese /u/, neutralizing the contrast between words like: full //– fool // look //– Luke // pull // – pool // should // – shoed//

  44. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - VOWEL PHONEMES Sentence practice for problem 3: Pull me out of the pool. /     /

  45. PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES - VOWEL PHONEMES Model sentences for the practice of all the English vowels: Lee bit Ray’s best hat. /    / Stew pushed Joe off the cot. /     / She is acing ten classes using the books and notes always honestly. /           /

  46. What are the tips on good English pronunciation?

  47. What are the tips on good English pronunciation? Word Stress Example: coming letter beautiful report myself forget remember explosion modernization

  48. What are the tips on good English pronunciation? Sentence stress In a normal English sentence certain words are stressed and certain words are unstressed. Normally stressed are content words. Normally unstressed are form words.

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