National Institute for Literacy
 

[EnglishLanguage 2322] Re: EnglishLanguage Digest, Vol 32, Issue 6

robinschwarz1 at aol.com robinschwarz1 at aol.com
Mon May 5 22:38:24 EDT 2008



Andrea--there is a whole field devoted to multiple language acquisition.? Two researchers who have written or edited books about this are De Angelis and Selinker--they published one in 2001 and another in 2007.?

Robin Schwarz







-----Original Message-----
From: Andrea Canter <lucidpandora at gmail.com>
To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov
Sent: Sat, 3 May 2008 9:11 pm
Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2315] Re: EnglishLanguage Digest, Vol 32, Issue 6









I am curious how 3rd and 4th language learning differs from 2nd language learning. In my own experience, once I started learning beyond the second language I found myself getting all my languages confused. I would think and say words in French when I was trying to speak German and vice versa. This is good in respect to exercising the ability to think in another language, but obviously very cumbersome. Is this normally what happens? Is there ANY research on it at all?


Andrea Canter



On Sat, May 3, 2008 at 8:18 PM, <englishlanguage-request at nifl.gov> wrote:


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Today's Topics:



? 1. [EnglishLanguage 2304] Re: Minimal pairs (robinschwarz1 at aol.com)

? 2. [EnglishLanguage 2305] Re: Minimal pairs (Michael Tate)





----------------------------------------------------------------------



Message: 1

Date: Fri, 02 May 2008 17:10:27 -0400

From: robinschwarz1 at aol.com

Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2304] Re: Minimal pairs

To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov

Message-ID: <8CA7AB013B6B464-9C0-228A at webmail-dd18.sysops.aol.com>

Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"





?See the work of Virginia Kuhl at the U of Washington, who is a neuroscientist, as well as the work of Norman Segalowitz, and his colleagues Gatbonton and Trofimovich, who do studies on adult language acquisition for starters. This latter group, especially Gatbonton, have theories about the progression of acquisition of phonological information (i.e. sounds) in language acquisition. Gatbonton's framework shows that this acquisition is gradual and predictable and subject to exposure to native language speakers. ? These researchers do not comment on the brain's ability to process language sounds. ?





I find one has to dig deep in the literature of neuroscience to find the information on how the brain processes language sounds as it matures, but Kuhl is recognized as one of the lead researchers on this process.? It has been very frustrating to me that ESL as a field tends to ignore neuroscience and its information on how the brain learns language(s) as well as the information coming out of international reading research, which now also includes studies on the brain and how languages are differentiated in it.? In addition, I feel that the whole field of multiple language acquisition is equally ignored.? Acquiring a third or fourth language is a very different process from acquiring a second language.? As near as I can tell, a very large percentage, maybe the majority, of our adult ESOL learners already speak two or more languages when they begin to learn English, so I feel we should be looking at the field of multiple language acquisition much more than at second language a




?cquisition .??



Robin Lovrien Schwarz















-----Original Message-----

From: Sally Bishop <s.bishop at aggiemail.usu.edu>

To: The Adult English Language Learners Discussion List <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>

Sent: Fri, 2 May 2008 3:46 pm

Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2301] Re: Minimal pairs



















Do you have research you can site on this comment: "

Bear in mind, however, that neuroscience and many decades of SLA study

are clear on the fact that adults will not acquire very accurate

pronunciation of foreign sounds because the brain of an adult language

learner does not process unfamiliar sounds effectively and does not

translate them into speech gestures ( i.e. pronunciation) accurately

anymore.?? Thus accents."



S Bishop





On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 1:46 PM, ?<robinschwarz1 at aol.com> wrote:









?An even better book for minimal pairs is Pronunciation Contrasts in English ( Nilsen & Nilsen) available in both old and new editions at Amazon.com./textbooks.? This book has ONLY minimal pairs of all contrasts in English and each page includes a) a list of languages for which that particular contrast is a problem, b) drawings of the mouth in both positions (actually side views) c) a set of minimal pair sentences with context d) a set of sentences with no context help (e.g. There is a bug/bag on the table.)?? and e) a complete list of all minimal pairs for that contrast.? It is an invaluable teaching resource.? Pronunciation Pairs is a good place to start if you are unfamiliar with the practice of minimal pairs, but it does not go far enough for review and mastery.? Learners typically memorize the contrasting words in the pairsin that book in lightning time, but do not generalize that skill to o



?ther pairs, in my experience.







I teach minimal pairs for the purpose of phoneme isolation and manipulation (auditory perception) -- a by-product of that instruction is better pronunciation.? I? know there has been discussion here previously about the effectiveness of MPs out of context.? I do both-- a lot of non-contextualized practice and a LOT of contextualized practice, and have always seen a clear improvement--and learners report clear improvement.? Teachers I coach who use this say their learners BEG for this practice. When teachers use this, or I use this approach, I emphasize that it is NOT a vocabulary exercise, but rather an auditory discrimination practice and practice in associating specific sounds with specific spellings.? Students often resist not knowing the meanings, but the minute you include meanings, the listening part goes away.? Different brain pathways are in play.??











Bear in mind, however, that neuroscience and many decades of SLA study are clear on the fact that adults will not acquire very accurate pronunciation of foreign sounds because the brain of an adult language learner does not process unfamiliar sounds effectively and does not translate them into speech gestures ( i.e. pronunciation) accurately anymore.?? Thus accents.?











An interesting study on adult Japanese showed that adults COULD learn to say L vs r? more accurately in a study environment, but could not generalize the new skill to informal conversation.? Nonetheless, pronunciation experts ARE able to achieve improvement, if not perfection.? There are LOTS of pronunciation aids out there- videos, software, etc--Rosetta Stone has a feature where learners can see a visigraph of what they say compared to a native model.? Learners LOVE this and it apparently helps a LOT.?? I heard a terrific presenter at the ACE of Florida conference last fall who does adult ESL pronunciation improvement. She uses LOTS of minimal pair practice and she emphasized the fact that to achieve improvement, you must do 100% correction.? That is, no error goes unnoticed and uncorrected. This is essentially what the study on Japanese did as well.? Obviously, you must have your learners' buy-in to do that or they will cry in fr



?ustr

?ation.?? She does it as part of a pronunciation improvement course where learners are there precisely to have their speech corrected. ?







Mirrors are GREAT, as are "whisperphones"--those devices which look like telephone receivers into which the learner speaks and can hear him or herself saying sounds. Adult learners typically cannot hear that they are not producing the sounds you want them to.??











Don't forget as well, that speech pathologists can help a LOT in showing learners how to place tongue and lips for more accurate pronunciation (as long as they do not characterize speech differences that are the result of first language differences as "speech impediments" or speech problems--these are normal speech differences.). ? I have urged for over 20 years that adult ESL should be working more closely with speech pathologists? to help learners hear and pronounce better and to help determine if there really ARE pronunciation problems even in first language.??











Robin Lovrien Schwarz































-----Original Message-----



From: Ted Klein <taklein at austin.rr.com>



To: The Adult English Language Learners Discussion List <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>



Sent: Fri, 2 May 2008 9:47 am



Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2295] Re: EnglishLanguage Digest, Vol 31,Issue 18









































Emma,









?









May I suggest that?listening procedures in teaching vowel and

consonant contrasts may be more important than pushing students into immediate

repetition. A basic principle in phonological exercises of any kind is that

listening and identification of sounds is of primary importance

before attempting repetition. If a student can't discriminate

the differences between two sounds, early attempts to produce them cause the

students to hear their own voices and those of other class members nearby,?

reinforcing existing problems. Identifying numerically seems to be the easiest

and quickest route. If students can't correctly hear the sounds, particularly

vowel sounds, they really can't make them. One of the problems with English is

that we have more vowel and diphthong sounds than most languages we deal with

and they are produced closer together. For example, Spanish has only one

high-front vowel sound, that of "piso" and it is between the English beat and

bit sounds. I also have found that if we teach minimal pair listening in single

words first, they should be followed by minimal sentences and then put into an

open environment for speaking practice. Here is a sample exercise?for the

same sounds that you gave, in medial position. Notice that consonants after the

vowels are different, because of the fact that in English syllable length

changes according to the consonants that follow:? beat (short) beef (half

long) bead (long) and bees (very long). Try it. Most students have the most

problems distinguishing the longer syllables. In Spanish, for example, all

syllables remain short. Initial priority should always be given to the ears.











?









?















MEDIAL

VOWEL EXERCISE-1 & 2-Track 6









?









?









???????????????????????????????????

-/i/-1???????????????????????????????????????????????????

-/I/-2









?









???????????????????????????????????

heat?????????????????????????????????????????????????????

hit









?









???????????????????????????????????

cease???????????????????????????????????????????????????

sis









?









???????????????????????????????????

heed????????????????????????????????????????????????????

hid









?









???????????????????????????????????

keen????????????????????????????????????????????????????

kin









?









???????????????????????????????????

Lee's???????????????????????????????????????????????????

Liz









???????????????????????











???????????????????????????????????

bead????????????????????????????????????????????????????

bid









?









???????????????????

It was a great heat.??????????????????????????????

It was a great hit.









?









I saw a

cease fire?????????????????????????????????

I saw sis fire.









?









We heed

it.??????????????????????????????????????????

We hid it.









?









They

were keen.??????????????????????????????????

They were kin.









?









It was

Lee's.????????????????????????????????????????

It was Liz.









?









See the

bead.??????????????????????????????????????

See the bid.









???????????????????????











???????

Don't hit it, heat it.









?









???????????????????????????????????

Will your sis ever cease?









?









???????????????????????????????????

We heed it and they hid it.









?









???????????????????????????????????

I'm keen to know her kin.









?









???????????????????????????????????

Liz is at Lee's house.









?









???????????????????????????????????

We bid on the bead.









?













?









Here are the procedures that I use with my students. Vowel numbers are

permanent and used to identify sounds all of the time. Beat and bit happen to

have the permanent numbers one?and two:??









?









?















1. Put the pairs of words and

their identifiers on the marker board. Students are encouraged to copy these

words in their notebooks, but are not given copies of the complete exercises.

Students are encouraged to tape any exercises in class, rather than practice

from the written language. My students receive an audio compact disk of all

vowel sounds on their first day.









?









2. The instructor should repeat

these pairs of words with numbers both horizontally and vertically for

familiarization. Vowel numbers will remain consistent with numbers used in the

vowel hatches.









?









3. The instructor will go to the

back of the room and call out words at random for the students to identify

numerically. This identification exercises can be done as both group and

individual exercises.? Example: HIT

2,? HEAT 1, HEAT 1, CEASE? 1, SIS 2, etc. If numerical errors are

heard, call out the correct number. When a majority of the students are able to

call the numbers correctly, change to double words at random. HEAT HEAT 1,

1,? HIT HEAT? 2, 1,? HIT? HIT 2, 2. HIT HEAT, 2, 1. etc.









?









4. After most of the students are

responding accurately to the minimal pairs, switch to the minimal sentence pairs. These sentence

exercises should all be performed without written reference. First repeat

the sentences while the students listen. Next read the sentences at

unpredictable random and have the students identify target words in a sentence

environment numerically. This will be more difficult, but will help the students

to hear the sounds in a real structural environment. Continue this exercise with

the group and with individuals.









?









Example:? It was a great heat. (1) It was a great

hit (2) It was a great hit (2), etc.









?









5. Finally give the students oral

practice with?sentences in which the target sounds are in free

environments.? "Don't hit it, heat

it." Occasional corrections should be done gently, diplomatically and in good

humor. If vowels 1, 3, 8 and 10 sound "flat" students can be instructed on how

to make their mouth and throat muscles tense. To strengthen the oral and throat

muscles takes time. Tongue twisters, "trabalenguas," which combine or emphasize

target sounds, are useful and students often enjoy and memorize them.









?









Vowel Numbers:? 1

beat??? 2? bit??? 3?

bait??? 4? bet??? 5? bat?? 6

bot (fly)??? 7?bought???8 boat??

9?book?? 10 boot?? 11. but









Diphthong

Numbers???

6+2???lied????6+9??

loud????? 7+2??? Lloyd?









?









Cheers,?? Ted









www.tedklein-ESL.com???











?????????????????????????????????????





















?





















?









----- Original Message -----





From: "Emma Bourassa" <ebourassa at tru.ca>









To: <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>









Sent: Thursday, May 01, 2008 5:41 PM









Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2294] Re: EnglishLanguage Digest, Vol 31,Issue

18






















>I believe it is Pronunciation Pairs that has illustrations,


single word and short dialogue practice. For example there might be:




>


sit? seat




> bit? beat





>





> etc. which is then worked


into a conversation:




> A: Bea, have a seat.





> B: I can eat but


can't sit.




> A: Sit in the seat, and eat your meat.





> B: No, I


need to knit.




> sorta silly but they do work for slow practice of moving


the mouth and tongue around.




> Pictures with mirrors so students can


watch themselves works well.




> e





>





> Emma Bourassa





>


English as a Second or Additional Language/ Teaching English as a Second

Language Instructor




> ESL Department





> Thompson Rivers


University




> 900 McGill Road. P.O. Box 3010





> Kamloops, B.C. V2C


5N3




> (250) 371-5895





> fax 371-5514





> ebourassa at tru.ca





>





>>>>







> From: Andrea Canter <lucidpandora at gmail.com>





> To:


<englishlanguage at nifl.gov>




>


Date: 29/04/2008 12:03 pm




> Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2292] Re:


EnglishLanguage Digest, Vol 31, Issue 18




>





> Jenny,





>







> Eek! That's the issue I'm coming up against soon. The way I've been


doing it




> works with the roman alphabet (and easiest with just one native


language in




> the group). I have this book that has Spanish translations


of English




> vocabulary words. Then it has the pronunciation of the word


spelled out in




> Spanish phonetics. I just borrow those phonetics for any


word I come across:




> (ex. Raise your hand = reiz yor jand). Sometimes


there isn't a sound in




> Spanish that quite matches the one in English and


I have to wrk around it




> (ex. the word 'sit'.... there isn't anything in


Spanish that sounds like the




> 'i' in that word.... I told my class it


sounds some where between 'eh' and




> 'ee' and they got it).





>







> The thing with non-Roman alphabets is unless you speak the language,


it




> would be quite a task to do it that way. Then if you have people


with




> differing languages, it would be even worse. If all the people in


your class




> know the Roman alphabet, then I have a link to a website that


has books and




> workshops on a unique system to teach pronunciation with.


I haven't tried




> the method, but it looks really cool. Let me know if you


want the address.




> Hope this (any of it) helps!





>





>


Andrea




>





> On Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 12:00 PM, <englishlanguage-request at nifl.gov>


wrote:




>





>> Send EnglishLanguage mailing list submissions


to




>>??????? englishlanguage at nifl.gov







>>





>> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web,


visit




>>??????? http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/englishlanguage







>> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help'


to




>>??????? englishlanguage-request at nifl.gov







>>





>> You can reach the person managing the list


at




>>??????? englishlanguage-owner at nifl.gov







>>





>> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is


more specific




>> than "Re: Contents of EnglishLanguage


digest..."




>>





>>





>> Today's


Topics:




>>





>>?? 1. [EnglishLanguage 2291]?


computerless ESL instruction




>>????? (Jenny


Hubler)




>>





>>





>>


----------------------------------------------------------------------




>>





>>


Message: 1




>> Date: Mon, 28 Apr 2008 08:57:35 -0500





>> From:


"Jenny Hubler" <JHubler at womenscenter.info>




>>


Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2291]? computerless ESL instruction




>>


To: "'The Adult English Language Learners Discussion

List'"




>>??????? <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>





>>


Message-ID: <001a01c8a937$d1da28d0$d600a8c0 at womenscenter.info>




>>


Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"




>>





>>


Andrea:




>>





>>





>>





>> Could you give more


details about how you teach pronunciation to speakers




>> of





>>


other languages? We have many Latinos, also some Koreans and a

student




>> from





>>


Sudan.




>>





>>





>>





>>


Jenny




>>





>> The Women's Center of Tarrant County,


TX




>>





>>





>>





>>?


_____




>>





>> From: englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov







>> [mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Andrea


Canter




>> Sent: Friday, April 25, 2008 3:58 PM





>> To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov





>>


Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2290] Re: EnglishLanguage Digest, Vol 31,

Issue




>> 16





>>





>>





>>





>> This is a


neat concept, but if you're like me and teach adults in venues




>>


without computers there needs to be something else. Since my class

is




>> entirely Hispanic, I use Spanish phonics to help. For some sounds


I have




>> to





>> go into further explanation because there is


no Spanish equivalent, but




>> for





>> the most part it


translates. This has worked SO well!! They have near




>> perfect


pronunciation instantly!! I'm getting ready to start a class with




>>


people from all over the world now. I have no idea how to address

the




>> issue





>> with them- any


suggestions??




>>





>> On Fri, Apr 25, 2008 at 12:00 PM, <englishlanguage-request at nifl.gov>





>>


wrote:




>>





>> Send EnglishLanguage mailing list submissions


to




>>?????? englishlanguage at nifl.gov







>>





>> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web,


visit




>>?????? http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/englishlanguage







>> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help'


to




>>?????? englishlanguage-request at nifl.gov







>>





>> You can reach the person managing the list


at




>>?????? englishlanguage-owner at nifl.gov







>>





>> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is


more specific




>> than "Re: Contents of EnglishLanguage


digest..."




>>





>>





>> Today's


Topics:




>>





>>? 1. [EnglishLanguage 2286] Re: on-line


dictionary with instant




>>???? sound (Molly


Elkins)




>>? 2. [EnglishLanguage 2287] Re: on-line dictionary with


instant




>>???? sound (Tom


Zurinskas)




>>? 3. [EnglishLanguage 2288] Re: on-line dictionary


with instant




>>???? sound (Elkins, Molly


(CR))




>>





>>





>>


----------------------------------------------------------------------




>>





>>


Message: 1




>> Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2008 11:06:33 -0600





>> From:


"Molly Elkins" <melkins at dclibraries.org>




>>


Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2286] Re: on-line dictionary with

instant




>>?????? sound





>> To:


"'The Adult English Language Learners Discussion

List'"




>>?????? <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>





>>


Message-ID: <004f01c8a62d$8c7cafe0$be070a0a at dpld.org>




>>


Content-Type: text/plain;??????

charset="us-ascii"




>>





>> I think it is pretty


interesting-




>>





>> My only concern is that it took some time


to load the sound- even on my




>> pretty fast computer, AND it has a


British accent. Many of my learners




>> have





>> complained


about media that is British instead of American

pronunciation.




>>





>> Thank you,





>>





>> Molly


Elkins




>> Literacy Specialist





>> Douglas County


Libraries




>> Phillip S. Miller Library





>>? 100 S. Wilcox


Street




>>? Castle Rock CO 80104





>>? Map





>>


Direct Phone: (303)688-7646




>> Alt Phone: (303) 791-READ





>>


Fax: (303) 688-7655




>> Email: melkins at dclibraries.org





>>


Web: www.DouglasCountyLibraries.org






>> -----Original Message-----





>> From: englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov







>> [mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Daphne


Greenberg




>> Sent: Sunday, April 06, 2008 3:00 PM





>> To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov





>>


Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2254] on-line dictionary with instant

sound




>>





>> ESL is not my area of expertise, so I don't know


if this site is good, or




>> if





>> it is a site that everyone


already knows about. A friend of mine




>> introduced





>> me to a


site described as? "An English Pronouncing Dictionary with

Instant




>> Sound" I tried it out with a few words, and it seemed like a


great idea




>> for





>> learners struggling with pronunciation of


specific words. They need to




>> have





>> some proficiency with


English spelling in order to use the site because




>> they





>>


need to write the word in order to hear it pronounced.




>>





>>


The url is:? http://howjsay.com/






>>





>> I am curious what people on this list think about this


site.




>>





>> Daphne





>>





>> Daphne


Greenberg




>> Associate Professor





>> Educational Psych. &


Special Ed.




>> Georgia State University





>> P.O. Box


3979




>> Atlanta, Georgia 30302-3979





>> phone:


404-413-8337




>> fax:404-413-8043





>> dgreenberg at gsu.edu





>>





>>


Daphne Greenberg




>> Associate Director





>> Center for the Study


of Adult Literacy




>> Georgia State University





>> P.O. Box


3977




>> Atlanta, Georgia 30302-3977





>> phone:


404-413-8337




>> fax:404-413-8043





>> dgreenberg at gsu.edu





>>


----------------------------------------------------




>> National


Institute for Literacy




>> Adult English Language Learners mailing


list




>> EnglishLanguage at nifl.gov





>>


To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to




>> http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/englishlanguage







>> Email delivered to melkins at dclibraries.org







>>





>>





>>





>>


------------------------------




>>





>> Message: 2





>>


Date: Fri, 25 Apr 2008 02:13:32 +0000




>> From: Tom Zurinskas <truespel at hotmail.com>





>>


Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2287] Re: on-line dictionary with

instant




>>?????? sound





>> To:


The Adult English Language Learners Discussion

List




>>?????? <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>, cornell


Kimble <cornell9 at earthlink.net>




>>


Message-ID: <BAY135-W4511FA4584E33E80584DDFD3DD0 at phx.gbl>




>>


Content-Type: text/plain;

charset="iso-8859-1"




>>





>>





>> m-w.com is a marvelous


dictionary that you can click on to hear words in




>> US





>>


accent.? The only nits I pick are what I call "awe-dropping" where

the




>> sound





>> "awe" is replaced sometimes by "ah".?


Click on the word "flaw" to hear it




>> correctly (note, the word "awe"


is said "ah").? Another nit is that words




>> starting with "ex-"


are said to be spoken as "ix-" (so example is




>> ixample).





>>


I don't think that is the norm in USA but perhaps UK.




>>





>>


Tom Zurinskas, USA - CT20, TN3, NJ33, FL5+




>> See truespel.com - and


the 4 truespel books plus "Occasional Poems" at




>>


authorhouse.com.




>>





>>





>>





>>





>>





>>



> From: melkins at dclibraries.org







>> > To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov





>>



> Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2008 11:06:33 -0600





>> > Subject:


[EnglishLanguage 2286] Re: on-line dictionary with instant




>>


sound




>> >





>> > I think it is pretty


interesting-




>> >





>> > My only concern is that it took


some time to load the sound- even on my




>> > pretty fast computer,


AND it has a British accent. Many of my learners




>> have





>>



> complained about media that is British instead of American





>>


pronunciation.




>> >





>> > Thank you,





>>



>





>> > Molly Elkins





>> > Literacy


Specialist




>> > Douglas County Libraries





>> > Phillip S.


Miller Library




>> > 100 S. Wilcox Street





>> > Castle


Rock CO 80104




>> > Map





>> > Direct Phone:


(303)688-7646




>> > Alt Phone: (303) 791-READ





>> > Fax:


(303) 688-7655




>> > Email: melkins at dclibraries.org





>>



> Web: www.DouglasCountyLibraries.org







>> > -----Original Message-----





>> > From: englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov







>> > [mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Daphne


Greenberg




>> > Sent: Sunday, April 06, 2008 3:00 PM





>> >


To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov






>> > Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2254] on-line dictionary with


instant sound




>> >





>> > ESL is not my area of expertise,


so I don't know if this site is good,




>> or





>> if





>>



> it is a site that everyone already knows about. A friend of


mine




>> introduced





>> > me to a site described as "An


English Pronouncing Dictionary with




>> Instant





>> > Sound"


I tried it out with a few words, and it seemed like a great idea




>>


for




>> > learners struggling with pronunciation of specific words.


They need to




>> have





>> > some proficiency with English


spelling in order to use the site because




>> they





>> > need


to write the word in order to hear it pronounced.




>> >





>>



> The url is: http://howjsay.com/







>> >





>> > I am curious what people on this list think


about this site.




>> >





>> > Daphne





>>



>





>> > Daphne Greenberg





>> > Associate


Professor




>> > Educational Psych. & Special Ed.





>> >


Georgia State University




>> > P.O. Box 3979





>> >


Atlanta, Georgia 30302-3979




>> > phone: 404-413-8337





>>



> fax:404-413-8043





>> > dgreenberg at gsu.edu





>>



>





>> > Daphne Greenberg





>> > Associate


Director




>> > Center for the Study of Adult Literacy





>>



> Georgia State University





>> > P.O. Box 3977





>> >


Atlanta, Georgia 30302-3977




>> > phone: 404-413-8337





>>



> fax:404-413-8043





>> > dgreenberg at gsu.edu





>> >


----------------------------------------------------




>> > National


Institute for Literacy




>> > Adult English Language Learners mailing


list




>> > EnglishLanguage at nifl.gov





>>



> To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go


to




>> > http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/englishlanguage







>> > Email delivered to melkins at dclibraries.org





>>



>





>> >


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list




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>>



> To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go


to




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>> > Email delivered to truespel at hotmail.com







>>





>>


_________________________________________________________________




>>


Spell a grand slam in this game where word skill meets World Series.

Get




>> in





>> the game.





>>





>> http://club.live.com/word_slugger.aspx?icid=word_slugger_wlhm_admod_april08







>>





>> ------------------------------





>>





>>


Message: 3




>> Date: Fri, 25 Apr 2008 09:26:53 -0600





>> From:


"Elkins, Molly (CR)" <melkins at dclibraries.org>




>>


Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2288] Re: on-line dictionary with

instant




>>?????? sound





>> To:


The Adult English Language Learners Discussion

List




>>?????? <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>





>>


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>>


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>>





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attachment was scrubbed...




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------------------------------




>>





>>


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>>


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------------------------------



Message: 2

Date: Fri, 2 May 2008 14:15:22 -0700

From: "Michael Tate" <mtate at sbctc.edu>

Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2305] Re: Minimal pairs

To: "The Adult English Language Learners Discussion List"

? ? ? ?<englishlanguage at nifl.gov>

Message-ID:

? ? ? ?<0CA6C79FCB4AC642A77B76C17A4316EE0317C444 at exch-1.sbctc2.local>

Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"



Robin and others:







Unless one has had to learn to language with sounds that don't exist in

English, it can be very frustrating to watch students repeatedly fail at

making sounds that are very easy for fluent English speakers.







Here's a sound from Thai that is diabolically difficult for most English

speakers. ?Try saying "nga". ? Here's a tip for saying it correctly:

say "sing-a" and then ?drop all the other sounds except the /ng/

followed by short /a/. ? ?Once you think you have mastered it, try

saying it in the midst of ?a ?conversation .







Here's a tip for teaching l/r. ?Ask your ?students to find something

that's about as thin as a pencil that they are willing to put in their

mouths. ?Tell the students to put the straw or pencil ?or whatever

against the back of their front teeth. ?Give them some minimal pairs

with "l/r" at the beginning, middle and end of words: ?luck ruck, mile

mire, etc. ?and that have the sounds in close proximity like "burlap"

"roller" , etc. ?To make the /l/ sound your tongue has to at least touch

the back of your front teeth. (In some English dialects, the /l/ ?sound

that isn't in an accented syllable or that is in the final position,

your tongue may not have to actually touch your teeth, but it get very,

very close to touching.)







Having a pencil touching the back of the front teeth makes the student

hyper-aware if his/her tongue is touching the back of the teeth.

Modesty may require that some students cover their mouths with their

hands or ?a sheet of paper while doing this.







After considerable practice (months), students won't need the pencil.

They still may not be able to make the /l/ consistently, but they'll

know when they weren't able to make /l/.







From: englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov

[mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of

robinschwarz1 at aol.com

Sent: Friday, May 02, 2008 12:46 PM

To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov

Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2298] Re: Minimal pairs







An even better book for minimal pairs is Pronunciation Contrasts in

English ( Nilsen & Nilsen) available in both old and new editions at

Amazon.com./textbooks. ?This book has ONLY minimal pairs of all

contrasts in English and each page includes a) a list of languages for

which that particular contrast is a problem, b) drawings of the mouth in

both positions (actually side views) c) a set of minimal pair sentences

with context d) a set of sentences with no context help (e.g. There is a

bug/bag on the table.) ? and e) a complete list of all minimal pairs for

that contrast. ?It is an invaluable teaching resource. ?Pronunciation

Pairs is a good place to start if you are unfamiliar with the practice

of minimal pairs, but it does not go far enough for review and mastery.

Learners typically memorize the contrasting words in the pairsin that

book in lightning time, but do not generalize that skill to o ther

pairs, in my experience.



I teach minimal pairs for the purpose of phoneme isolation and

manipulation (auditory perception) -- a by-product of that instruction

is better pronunciation. ?I ?know there has been discussion here

previously about the effectiveness of MPs out of context. ?I do both-- a

lot of non-contextualized practice and a LOT of contextualized practice,

and have always seen a clear improvement--and learners report clear

improvement. ?Teachers I coach who use this say their learners BEG for

this practice. When teachers use this, or I use this approach, I

emphasize that it is NOT a vocabulary exercise, but rather an auditory

discrimination practice and practice in associating specific sounds with

specific spellings. ?Students often resist not knowing the meanings, but

the minute you include meanings, the listening part goes away.

Different brain pathways are in play.



Bear in mind, however, that neuroscience and many decades of SLA study

are clear on the fact that adults will not acquire very accurate

pronunciation of foreign sounds because the brain of an adult language

learner does not process unfamiliar sounds effectively and does not

translate them into speech gestures ( i.e. pronunciation) accurately

anymore. ? Thus accents.



An interesting study on adult Japanese showed that adults COULD learn to

say L vs r ?more accurately in a study environment, but could not

generalize the new skill to informal conversation. ?Nonetheless,

pronunciation experts ARE able to achieve improvement, if not

perfection. ?There are LOTS of pronunciation aids out there- videos,

software, etc--Rosetta Stone has a feature where learners can see a

visigraph of what they say compared to a native model. ?Learners LOVE

this and it apparently helps a LOT. ? I heard a terrific presenter at

the ACE of Florida conference last fall who does adult ESL pronunciation

improvement. She uses LOTS of minimal pair practice and she emphasized

the fact that to achieve improvement, you must do 100% correction. ?That

is, no error goes unnoticed and uncorrected. This is essentially what

the study on Japanese did as well. ?Obviously, you must have your

learners' buy-in to do that or they will cry in frustr ation. ? She does

it as part of a pronunciation improvement course where learners are

there precisely to have their speech corrected.



Mirrors are GREAT, as are "whisperphones"--those devices which look like

telephone receivers into which the learner speaks and can hear him or

herself saying sounds. Adult learners typically cannot hear that they

are not producing the sounds you want them to.



Don't forget as well, that speech pathologists can help a LOT in showing

learners how to place tongue and lips for more accurate pronunciation

(as long as they do not characterize speech differences that are the

result of first language differences as "speech impediments" or speech

problems--these are normal speech differences.). ? I have urged for over

20 years that adult ESL should be working more closely with speech

pathologists ?to help learners hear and pronounce better and to help

determine if there really ARE pronunciation problems even in first

language.



Robin Lovrien Schwarz











-----Original Message-----

From: Ted Klein <taklein at austin.rr.com>

To: The Adult English Language Learners Discussion List

<englishlanguage at nifl.gov>

Sent: Fri, 2 May 2008 9:47 am

Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2295] Re: EnglishLanguage Digest, Vol 31,Issue

18



Emma,







May I suggest that listening procedures in teaching vowel and consonant

contrasts may be more important than pushing students into immediate

repetition. A basic principle in phonological exercises of any kind is

that listening and identification of sounds is of primary importance

before attempting repetition. If a student can't discriminate the

differences between two sounds, early attempts to produce them cause the

students to hear their own voices and those of other class members

nearby, ?reinforcing existing problems. Identifying numerically seems to

be the easiest and quickest route. If students can't correctly hear the

sounds, particularly vowel sounds, they really can't make them. One of

the problems with English is that we have more vowel and diphthong

sounds than most languages we deal with and they are produced closer

together. For example, Spanish has only one high-front vowel sound, that

of "piso" and it is between the English beat and bit sounds. I also have

found that if we teach minimal pair listening in single words first,

they should be followed by minimal sentences and then put into an open

environment for speaking practice. Here is a sample exercise for the

same sounds that you gave, in medial position. Notice that consonants

after the vowels are different, because of the fact that in English

syllable length changes according to the consonants that follow: ?beat

(short) beef (half long) bead (long) and bees (very long). Try it. Most

students have the most problems distinguishing the longer syllables. In

Spanish, for example, all syllables remain short. Initial priority

should always be given to the ears.











MEDIAL VOWEL EXERCISE-1 & 2-Track 6











? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?-/i/-1

-/I/-2







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?heat

hit







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?cease

sis







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?heed

hid







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?keen

kin







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?Lee's

Liz







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?bead

bid







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?It was a great heat.

It was a great hit.







I saw a cease fire ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?I saw sis fire.







We heed it. ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? We hid it.







They were keen. ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? They were kin.







It was Lee's. ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? It was Liz.







See the bead. ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? See the bid.







? ? ? ?Don't hit it, heat it.







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?Will your sis ever cease?







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?We heed it and they hid it.







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?I'm keen to know her kin.







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?Liz is at Lee's house.







? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?We bid on the bead.











Here are the procedures that I use with my students. Vowel numbers are

permanent and used to identify sounds all of the time. Beat and bit

happen to have the permanent numbers one and two:











1. Put the pairs of words and their identifiers on the marker board.

Students are encouraged to copy these words in their notebooks, but are

not given copies of the complete exercises. Students are encouraged to

tape any exercises in class, rather than practice from the written

language. My students receive an audio compact disk of all vowel sounds

on their first day.







2. The instructor should repeat these pairs of words with numbers both

horizontally and vertically for familiarization. Vowel numbers will

remain consistent with numbers used in the vowel hatches.







3. The instructor will go to the back of the room and call out words at

random for the students to identify numerically. This identification

exercises can be done as both group and individual exercises. ?Example:

HIT 2, ?HEAT 1, HEAT 1, CEASE ?1, SIS 2, etc. If numerical errors are

heard, call out the correct number. When a majority of the students are

able to call the numbers correctly, change to double words at random.

HEAT HEAT 1, 1, ?HIT HEAT ?2, 1, ?HIT ?HIT 2, 2. HIT HEAT, 2, 1. etc.







4. After most of the students are responding accurately to the minimal

pairs, switch to the minimal sentence pairs. These sentence exercises

should all be performed without written reference. First repeat the

sentences while the students listen. Next read the sentences at

unpredictable random and have the students identify target words in a

sentence environment numerically. This will be more difficult, but will

help the students to hear the sounds in a real structural environment.

Continue this exercise with the group and with individuals.







Example: ?It was a great heat. (1) It was a great hit (2) It was a great

hit (2), etc.







5. Finally give the students oral practice with sentences in which the

target sounds are in free environments. ?"Don't hit it, heat it."

Occasional corrections should be done gently, diplomatically and in good

humor. If vowels 1, 3, 8 and 10 sound "flat" students can be instructed

on how to make their mouth and throat muscles tense. To strengthen the

oral and throat muscles takes time. Tongue twisters, "trabalenguas,"

which combine or emphasize target sounds, are useful and students often

enjoy and memorize them.







Vowel Numbers: ?1 beat ? ?2 ?bit ? ?3 ?bait ? ?4 ?bet ? ?5 ?bat ? 6 bot

(fly) ? ?7 bought ? 8 boat ? 9 book ? 10 boot ? 11. but



Diphthong Numbers ? ?6+2 ? lied ? ?6+9 ? loud ? ? ?7+2 ? ?Lloyd







Cheers, ? Ted



www.tedklein-ESL.com















----- Original Message -----



From: "Emma Bourassa" <ebourassa at tru.ca>



To: <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>



Sent: Thursday, May 01, 2008 5:41 PM



Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2294] Re: EnglishLanguage Digest, Vol 31,Issue

18








>I believe it is Pronunciation Pairs that has illustrations, single word


and short dialogue practice. For example there might be:


> sit ?seat



> bit ?beat



>



> etc. which is then worked into a conversation:



> A: Bea, have a seat.



> B: I can eat but can't sit.



> A: Sit in the seat, and eat your meat.



> B: No, I need to knit.



> sorta silly but they do work for slow practice of moving the mouth and


tongue around.


> Pictures with mirrors so students can watch themselves works well.



> e



>



> Emma Bourassa



> English as a Second or Additional Language/ Teaching English as a


Second Language Instructor


> ESL Department



> Thompson Rivers University



> 900 McGill Road. P.O. Box 3010



> Kamloops, B.C. V2C 5N3



> (250) 371-5895



> fax 371-5514



> ebourassa at tru.ca



>



>>>>



> From: Andrea Canter <lucidpandora at gmail.com>



> To: <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>



> Date: 29/04/2008 12:03 pm



> Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2292] Re: EnglishLanguage Digest, Vol 31,


Issue 18


>



> Jenny,



>



> Eek! That's the issue I'm coming up against soon. The way I've been


doing it


> works with the roman alphabet (and easiest with just one native


language in


> the group). I have this book that has Spanish translations of English



> vocabulary words. Then it has the pronunciation of the word spelled


out in


> Spanish phonetics. I just borrow those phonetics for any word I come


across:


> (ex. Raise your hand = reiz yor jand). Sometimes there isn't a sound


in


> Spanish that quite matches the one in English and I have to wrk around


it


> (ex. the word 'sit'.... there isn't anything in Spanish that sounds


like the


> 'i' in that word.... I told my class it sounds some where between 'eh'


and


> 'ee' and they got it).



>



> The thing with non-Roman alphabets is unless you speak the language,


it


> would be quite a task to do it that way. Then if you have people with



> differing languages, it would be even worse. If all the people in your


class


> know the Roman alphabet, then I have a link to a website that has


books and


> workshops on a unique system to teach pronunciation with. I haven't


tried


> the method, but it looks really cool. Let me know if you want the


address.


> Hope this (any of it) helps!



>



> Andrea



>



> On Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 12:00 PM, <englishlanguage-request at nifl.gov>


wrote:


>



>> Send EnglishLanguage mailing list submissions to



>> ? ? ? ?englishlanguage at nifl.gov



>>



>> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit



>> ? ? ? ?http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/englishlanguage



>> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to



>> ? ? ? ?englishlanguage-request at nifl.gov



>>



>> You can reach the person managing the list at



>> ? ? ? ?englishlanguage-owner at nifl.gov



>>



>> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific



>> than "Re: Contents of EnglishLanguage digest..."



>>



>>



>> Today's Topics:



>>



>> ? 1. [EnglishLanguage 2291] ?computerless ESL instruction



>> ? ? ?(Jenny Hubler)



>>



>>



>>


----------------------------------------------------------------------


>>



>> Message: 1



>> Date: Mon, 28 Apr 2008 08:57:35 -0500



>> From: "Jenny Hubler" <JHubler at womenscenter.info>



>> Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2291] ?computerless ESL instruction



>> To: "'The Adult English Language Learners Discussion List'"



>> ? ? ? ?<englishlanguage at nifl.gov>



>> Message-ID: <001a01c8a937$d1da28d0$d600a8c0 at womenscenter.info>



>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"



>>



>> Andrea:



>>



>>



>>



>> Could you give more details about how you teach pronunciation to


speakers


>> of



>> other languages? We have many Latinos, also some Koreans and a


student


>> from



>> Sudan.



>>



>>



>>



>> Jenny



>>



>> The Women's Center of Tarrant County, TX



>>



>>



>>



>> ?_____



>>



>> From: englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov



>> [mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov


<mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov?> ] On Behalf Of Andrea Canter


>> Sent: Friday, April 25, 2008 3:58 PM



>> To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov



>> Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2290] Re: EnglishLanguage Digest, Vol 31,


Issue


>> 16



>>



>>



>>



>> This is a neat concept, but if you're like me and teach adults in


venues


>> without computers there needs to be something else. Since my class is



>> entirely Hispanic, I use Spanish phonics to help. For some sounds I


have


>> to



>> go into further explanation because there is no Spanish equivalent,


but


>> for



>> the most part it translates. This has worked SO well!! They have near



>> perfect pronunciation instantly!! I'm getting ready to start a class


with


>> people from all over the world now. I have no idea how to address the



>> issue



>> with them- any suggestions??



>>



>> On Fri, Apr 25, 2008 at 12:00 PM, <englishlanguage-request at nifl.gov>



>> wrote:



>>



>> Send EnglishLanguage mailing list submissions to



>> ? ? ? englishlanguage at nifl.gov



>>



>> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit



>> ? ? ? http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/englishlanguage



>> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to



>> ? ? ? englishlanguage-request at nifl.gov



>>



>> You can reach the person managing the list at



>> ? ? ? englishlanguage-owner at nifl.gov



>>



>> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific



>> than "Re: Contents of EnglishLanguage digest..."



>>



>>



>> Today's Topics:



>>



>> ?1. [EnglishLanguage 2286] Re: on-line dictionary with instant



>> ? ? sound (Molly Elkins)



>> ?2. [EnglishLanguage 2287] Re: on-line dictionary with instant



>> ? ? sound (Tom Zurinskas)



>> ?3. [EnglishLanguage 2288] Re: on-line dictionary with instant



>> ? ? sound (Elkins, Molly (CR))



>>



>>



>>


----------------------------------------------------------------------


>>



>> Message: 1



>> Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2008 11:06:33 -0600



>> From: "Molly Elkins" <melkins at dclibraries.org>



>> Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2286] Re: on-line dictionary with instant



>> ? ? ? sound



>> To: "'The Adult English Language Learners Discussion List'"



>> ? ? ? <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>



>> Message-ID: <004f01c8a62d$8c7cafe0$be070a0a at dpld.org>



>> Content-Type: text/plain; ? ? ? charset="us-ascii"



>>



>> I think it is pretty interesting-



>>



>> My only concern is that it took some time to load the sound- even on


my


>> pretty fast computer, AND it has a British accent. Many of my


learners


>> have



>> complained about media that is British instead of American


pronunciation.


>>



>> Thank you,



>>



>> Molly Elkins



>> Literacy Specialist



>> Douglas County Libraries



>> Phillip S. Miller Library



>> ?100 S. Wilcox Street



>> ?Castle Rock CO 80104



>> ?Map



>> Direct Phone: (303)688-7646



>> Alt Phone: (303) 791-READ



>> Fax: (303) 688-7655



>> Email: melkins at dclibraries.org



>> Web: www.DouglasCountyLibraries.org



>> -----Original Message-----



>> From: englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov



>> [mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov


<mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov?> ] On Behalf Of Daphne

Greenberg


>> Sent: Sunday, April 06, 2008 3:00 PM



>> To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov



>> Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2254] on-line dictionary with instant sound



>>



>> ESL is not my area of expertise, so I don't know if this site is


good, or


>> if



>> it is a site that everyone already knows about. A friend of mine



>> introduced



>> me to a site described as ?"An English Pronouncing Dictionary with


Instant


>> Sound" I tried it out with a few words, and it seemed like a great


idea


>> for



>> learners struggling with pronunciation of specific words. They need


to


>> have



>> some proficiency with English spelling in order to use the site


because


>> they



>> need to write the word in order to hear it pronounced.



>>



>> The url is: ?http://howjsay.com/



>>



>> I am curious what people on this list think about this site.



>>



>> Daphne



>>



>> Daphne Greenberg



>> Associate Professor



>> Educational Psych. & Special Ed.



>> Georgia State University



>> P.O. Box 3979



>> Atlanta, Georgia 30302-3979



>> phone: 404-413-8337



>> fax:404-413-8043



>> dgreenberg at gsu.edu



>>



>> Daphne Greenberg



>> Associate Director



>> Center for the Study of Adult Literacy



>> Georgia State University



>> P.O. Box 3977



>> Atlanta, Georgia 30302-3977



>> phone: 404-413-8337



>> fax:404-413-8043



>> dgreenberg at gsu.edu



>> ----------------------------------------------------



>> National Institute for Literacy



>> Adult English Language Learners mailing list



>> EnglishLanguage at nifl.gov



>> To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to



>> http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/englishlanguage



>> Email delivered to melkins at dclibraries.org



>>



>>



>>



>> ------------------------------



>>



>> Message: 2



>> Date: Fri, 25 Apr 2008 02:13:32 +0000



>> From: Tom Zurinskas <truespel at hotmail.com>



>> Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2287] Re: on-line dictionary with instant



>> ? ? ? sound



>> To: The Adult English Language Learners Discussion List



>> ? ? ? <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>, cornell Kimble <


cornell9 at earthlink.net>


>> Message-ID: <BAY135-W4511FA4584E33E80584DDFD3DD0 at phx.gbl>



>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"



>>



>>



>> m-w.com is a marvelous dictionary that you can click on to hear words


in


>> US



>> accent. ?The only nits I pick are what I call "awe-dropping" where


the


>> sound



>> "awe" is replaced sometimes by "ah". ?Click on the word "flaw" to


hear it


>> correctly (note, the word "awe" is said "ah"). ?Another nit is that


words


>> starting with "ex-" are said to be spoken as "ix-" (so example is



>> ixample).



>> I don't think that is the norm in USA but perhaps UK.



>>



>> Tom Zurinskas, USA - CT20, TN3, NJ33, FL5+



>> See truespel.com - and the 4 truespel books plus "Occasional Poems"


at


>> authorhouse.com.



>>



>>



>>



>>



>>



>> > From: melkins at dclibraries.org



>> > To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov



>> > Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2008 11:06:33 -0600



>> > Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2286] Re: on-line dictionary with instant



>> sound



>> >



>> > I think it is pretty interesting-



>> >



>> > My only concern is that it took some time to load the sound- even


on my


>> > pretty fast computer, AND it has a British accent. Many of my


learners


>> have



>> > complained about media that is British instead of American



>> pronunciation.



>> >



>> > Thank you,



>> >



>> > Molly Elkins



>> > Literacy Specialist



>> > Douglas County Libraries



>> > Phillip S. Miller Library



>> > 100 S. Wilcox Street



>> > Castle Rock CO 80104



>> > Map



>> > Direct Phone: (303)688-7646



>> > Alt Phone: (303) 791-READ



>> > Fax: (303) 688-7655



>> > Email: melkins at dclibraries.org



>> > Web: www.DouglasCountyLibraries.org



>> > -----Original Message-----



>> > From: englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov



>> > [mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov


<mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov?> ] On Behalf Of Daphne

Greenberg


>> > Sent: Sunday, April 06, 2008 3:00 PM



>> > To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov



>> > Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2254] on-line dictionary with instant


sound


>> >



>> > ESL is not my area of expertise, so I don't know if this site is


good,


>> or



>> if



>> > it is a site that everyone already knows about. A friend of mine



>> introduced



>> > me to a site described as "An English Pronouncing Dictionary with



>> Instant



>> > Sound" I tried it out with a few words, and it seemed like a great


idea


>> for



>> > learners struggling with pronunciation of specific words. They need


to


>> have



>> > some proficiency with English spelling in order to use the site


because


>> they



>> > need to write the word in order to hear it pronounced.



>> >



>> > The url is: http://howjsay.com/



>> >



>> > I am curious what people on this list think about this site.



>> >



>> > Daphne



>> >



>> > Daphne Greenberg



>> > Associate Professor



>> > Educational Psych. & Special Ed.



>> > Georgia State University



>> > P.O. Box 3979



>> > Atlanta, Georgia 30302-3979



>> > phone: 404-413-8337



>> > fax:404-413-8043



>> > dgreenberg at gsu.edu



>> >



>> > Daphne Greenberg



>> > Associate Director



>> > Center for the Study of Adult Literacy



>> > Georgia State University



>> > P.O. Box 3977



>> > Atlanta, Georgia 30302-3977



>> > phone: 404-413-8337



>> > fax:404-413-8043



>> > dgreenberg at gsu.edu



>> > ----------------------------------------------------



>> > National Institute for Literacy



>> > Adult English Language Learners mailing list



>> > EnglishLanguage at nifl.gov



>> > To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to



>> > http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/englishlanguage



>> > Email delivered to melkins at dclibraries.org



>> >



>> > ----------------------------------------------------



>> > National Institute for Literacy



>> > Adult English Language Learners mailing list



>> > EnglishLanguage at nifl.gov



>> > To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to



>> http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/englishlanguage



>> > Email delivered to truespel at hotmail.com



>>



>> _________________________________________________________________



>> Spell a grand slam in this game where word skill meets World Series.


Get


>> in



>> the game.



>>



>>


http://club.live.com/word_slugger.aspx?icid=word_slugger_wlhm_admod_apri

l08


>>



>> ------------------------------



>>



>> Message: 3



>> Date: Fri, 25 Apr 2008 09:26:53 -0600



>> From: "Elkins, Molly (CR)" <melkins at dclibraries.org>



>> Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2288] Re: on-line dictionary with instant



>> ? ? ? sound



>> To: The Adult English Language Learners Discussion List



>> ? ? ? <englishlanguage at nifl.gov>



>> Message-ID: <web-1497724 at bl-208.cluster1.echolabs.net>



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