Learning non-Swedish speech sounds : A study of Swedish students’ pronunciation and ability to learn English phonemes

Previous research has shown that L2 students have difficulties producing and even recognising sounds that do not exist in their mother tongue. It has also been concluded that accented speech not only compromises intelligibility but also makes the listener negatively biased towards the speaker. The p...

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Main Author: Reinholdsson, Tommy
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Karlstads universitet, Centrum för språk- och litteraturdidaktik 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-31658
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kau-316582018-01-12T05:12:36ZLearning non-Swedish speech sounds : A study of Swedish students’ pronunciation and ability to learn English phonemesengReinholdsson, TommyKarlstads universitet, Centrum för språk- och litteraturdidaktikKarlstads universitet, Institutionen för språk, litteratur och interkultur2014Pronunciationlearningenglishphonemesspeech soundsnon-Swedish phonemesSpecific LanguagesStudier av enskilda språkSpecific LanguagesStudier av enskilda språkPrevious research has shown that L2 students have difficulties producing and even recognising sounds that do not exist in their mother tongue. It has also been concluded that accented speech not only compromises intelligibility but also makes the listener negatively biased towards the speaker. The present study explores how proficient Swedish students are in producing the speech sounds /dʒ/, /j/, /v/, /w/, /ʃ/and /tʃ/, of which /dʒ/, /w/ and /tʃ/do not exist in Swedish. In addition, it explores whether their pronunciation of these sounds improves after a brief pronunciation lesson, if this improvement is lasting and whether they tend to learn the pronunciation of words as separate units or are able to generalise the rules of pronunciation and appropriately apply them. It also investigates whether a difference in the structure of the pronunciation lesson affects the students’ results. The study revealed that the students do have difficulties with correctly producing in particular /tʃ/, /dʒ/ and /j/. More specifically, they tended to confuse /dʒ/ and /j/ whereas many students appeared to have been unaware that /tʃ/ exists and used the /ʃ/-sound instead, which exists in Swedish. After the pronunciation lesson, however, the students significantly improved their pronunciation. This improvement was shown to be lasting and the students were generalising rules rather than learning words as separate units. What the study failed to show was a significant difference in results caused by a difference in the structure of the pronunciation lesson. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-31658application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Pronunciation
learning
english
phonemes
speech sounds
non-Swedish phonemes
Specific Languages
Studier av enskilda språk
Specific Languages
Studier av enskilda språk
spellingShingle Pronunciation
learning
english
phonemes
speech sounds
non-Swedish phonemes
Specific Languages
Studier av enskilda språk
Specific Languages
Studier av enskilda språk
Reinholdsson, Tommy
Learning non-Swedish speech sounds : A study of Swedish students’ pronunciation and ability to learn English phonemes
description Previous research has shown that L2 students have difficulties producing and even recognising sounds that do not exist in their mother tongue. It has also been concluded that accented speech not only compromises intelligibility but also makes the listener negatively biased towards the speaker. The present study explores how proficient Swedish students are in producing the speech sounds /dʒ/, /j/, /v/, /w/, /ʃ/and /tʃ/, of which /dʒ/, /w/ and /tʃ/do not exist in Swedish. In addition, it explores whether their pronunciation of these sounds improves after a brief pronunciation lesson, if this improvement is lasting and whether they tend to learn the pronunciation of words as separate units or are able to generalise the rules of pronunciation and appropriately apply them. It also investigates whether a difference in the structure of the pronunciation lesson affects the students’ results. The study revealed that the students do have difficulties with correctly producing in particular /tʃ/, /dʒ/ and /j/. More specifically, they tended to confuse /dʒ/ and /j/ whereas many students appeared to have been unaware that /tʃ/ exists and used the /ʃ/-sound instead, which exists in Swedish. After the pronunciation lesson, however, the students significantly improved their pronunciation. This improvement was shown to be lasting and the students were generalising rules rather than learning words as separate units. What the study failed to show was a significant difference in results caused by a difference in the structure of the pronunciation lesson.
author Reinholdsson, Tommy
author_facet Reinholdsson, Tommy
author_sort Reinholdsson, Tommy
title Learning non-Swedish speech sounds : A study of Swedish students’ pronunciation and ability to learn English phonemes
title_short Learning non-Swedish speech sounds : A study of Swedish students’ pronunciation and ability to learn English phonemes
title_full Learning non-Swedish speech sounds : A study of Swedish students’ pronunciation and ability to learn English phonemes
title_fullStr Learning non-Swedish speech sounds : A study of Swedish students’ pronunciation and ability to learn English phonemes
title_full_unstemmed Learning non-Swedish speech sounds : A study of Swedish students’ pronunciation and ability to learn English phonemes
title_sort learning non-swedish speech sounds : a study of swedish students’ pronunciation and ability to learn english phonemes
publisher Karlstads universitet, Centrum för språk- och litteraturdidaktik
publishDate 2014
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-31658
work_keys_str_mv AT reinholdssontommy learningnonswedishspeechsoundsastudyofswedishstudentspronunciationandabilitytolearnenglishphonemes
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