Pronunciation and Comprehension of Oral English in The English As A Foreign Language Class: Key Aspects, Students' Perceptions and Proposals
Pronunciation and Comprehension of Oral English in The English As A Foreign Language Class: Key Aspects, Students' Perceptions and Proposals
Pronunciation and Comprehension of Oral English in The English As A Foreign Language Class: Key Aspects, Students' Perceptions and Proposals
Journal of Language Teaching and Research, Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 262-273, March 2014
© 2014 ACADEMY PUBLISHER Manufactured in Finland.
doi:10.4304/jltr.5.2.262-273
Abstract—Traditionally, little attention has been paid to learners’ perceptions of pronunciation and
comprehension instruction in English as a Foreign Language (EFL) contexts. This study is aimed at putting
forward a series of detected key aspects, students’ perceptions and proposals for enhancing, improving and
implementing pronunciation and comprehension skills in the Spanish higher-education EFL class –specifically
a pronunciation class. By means of the administration to students of three questionnaires designed ad hoc for
this small-scale, pilot study, a diagnostic analysis has been carried out that has yield to valuable data and to
the suggestion of specific proposals derived from first-hand experience. Accordingly, among other aspects, the
results obtained show that students’ motivation and implication is high when being taught pronunciation, they
believe in the usefulness of pronunciation instruction, but at the same time they may experiment frustration
relatively easily, especially due to inhibition and peer-comparison factors that may negatively affect
performance and self-confidence. In the same way, students are aware of the importance of both segmental
and suprasegmental aspects in order to favor comprehensibility, they consider variation in means, methods
and activities to be fundamental in the classroom in order to keep their own interest and motivation and they
find computer-assisted and audio-visual aids highly useful and valued when it comes to learn pronunciation.
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Background and Objectives
It is beyond doubt that pronouncing a language properly is a key aspect when understanding and making ourselves
understood. In the English as a Foreign Language (EFL) teaching and learning process pronunciation should play a
determining role since it is directly related with the development of students’ communicative competence and thus to
language proficiency and comprehensibility.
Spoken communication is grounded on the communicability not only determined by correct grammar and profuse
vocabulary but also on the correct interplay between the segmental and suprasegmental features making up
pronunciation. As Burns (2003) concedes, despite minor inaccuracies in vocabulary and grammar, learners are more
likely to communicate effectively when they have good pronunciation and intonation. Nowadays, as Pourhosein (2012,
p.120) states, despite the “emphasis on the importance of meaningful communication and intelligible pronunciation, it is
not enough to leave pronunciation teaching and training to pronunciation classes only”; it is determining that the
relatively few hours devoted to this purpose in the curriculum are planned and devised to make the most of them, giving
students the tools to continue improving on their own and the voice to express in which ways they learn the best. In
spite of this, “researchers in applied linguistics have paid little attention to learners’ perceptions of pronunciation
instruction in L2 contexts” (Kang, 2010) so that this article has tried to deepen on students’ perceptions and feelings
about English pronunciation issues in general and about the English pronunciation subject EA0910 “Pronunciation and
comprehension of oral English” in particular in order to make a diagnostic analysis of the situation which will ideally
lead to an improvement in their pronunciation skills.
This small-scale but representative pilot study stems thus from my own concern as an English pronunciation teacher
about the need to do some research on the traditionally assumed and clearly noticeable difficulties most Spanish
students 1 find in pronouncing English properly with the final aim to devise and implement feasible improvement
This research has been carried out within the framework of the project entitled “Elaboración de Material didáctico de autoapr endizaje y refuerzo
para la asignatura “EA0910 – Pronunciación y comprensión de la lengua inglesa” en base a la reflexión previa, autoevaluación y sugerencias del
alumando”, awarded by Universitat Jaume I (Castellón, Spain) in year 2012.
1
In this case we are focusing on higher education students in a foreign language context. They are students of the English Stu dies degree (in their first
year).
measures. With this objective in mind, with a series of questionnaires designed ad hoc –and according to my own
observation and experience– I have tried to determine students’ perceptions, needs, demands and feelings regarding
English pronunciation and comprehension and their views about the materials, instruction methods, tools and contents
used and/or included in a regular English pronunciation class in an EFL high-education context. Students’ specific
suggestions have finally been analysed in order to be able to pose improvement proposals devised from first-hand
experience. With this analysis of key aspects, perceptions and proposals, this study is aimed at becoming the first one
from a series intended at better understanding why pronunciation is such a hurdle for Spanish EFL learners and how this
could be solved or at least improved.
B. Pronunciation: The Great Hurdle for Spanish EFL Students
It is not a secret in the Spanish EFL teaching context that pronunciation is a great hurdle for most Spanish students
who do not feel comfortable or at the same proficiency level of other European counterparts with the way they
pronounce English. In fact, as Coe (1987 in Swan and Smith) states "European Spanish speakers, in particular, probably
find English pronunciation harder than speakers of any other European language". Moreover, as Pourhosein (2012)
concedes, limited pronunciation skills can affect learners’ self-confidence by decreasing it, also restricting social
interactions, and thus negatively affecting estimations of a speaker’s credibility and abilities, which obviously
negatively influences the EFL instruction process. In fact, as Jones (2002) states, pronunciation teaching methods
should address the issues of motivation and exposure by creating awareness and stressing the importance of sound
pronunciation. In this very same sense, Pourhosein (2012) lists a series of factors affecting the learning of English
pronunciation among which we find: attitude, motivation, instruction and exposure to target language.
That pronunciation is a rather problematic aspect for most Spanish students is (regretably) a fact, but the reasons and
solutions may be varied in nature and in effectiveness. Traditionally, most Spanish-speaking countries have tended (and
still tend) to neglect the teaching of pronunciation in EFL settings, focusing instead on grammar, reading and writing
skills. Already in 1994, Gilbert described pronunciation as an orphan in English programs around the world and in 2010
she still believed that “pronunciation continues to be the EFL/ESL orphan” (Gilbert, 2010, p. 1). This lack of
enhancement of listening and speaking skills has originated generations of students with a manifested insecurity and a
lack of proficiency in their oral capacities in English, something, which, on the other hand, is a general complaint and
claim in the Spanish EFL context.
However, along with the weaknesses of a particular curricular design, native language may –positively or negatively–
influence second or foreign language pronunciation since the speech habits of the mother tongue tend to superimpose on
the speech habits of the target language (Akram and Qureshi, 2012). In this sense, Cunningham Florez (1998, p. 3), for
instance, concedes that errors in aspiration, intonation, and rhythm in the target language are likely to be caused by
interference or negative transfer from the first language and Odlin (1989, p. 112) goes on stating that, “there is no little
doubt that native language phonetics and phonology are powerful influences on second language pronunciation”. In this
sense, Spanish and English phonological systems show important differences, especially as regards phoneme production,
linking phenomena, intonation and stress, which may make pronunciation specially hard for Spanish speakers. For
instance, Spanish does not distinguish between short and long vowels –the length of the vowel is not significant in order
to distinguish words– so that Spanish speakers tend to confuse these pairs both in comprehension and in speaking.
Moreover, as Case (2012) states, Spanish speakers tend to find great difficulty in recognising not rhotic versions of
vowel sounds and, due to the differences in syllable patterns –Spanish is a syllable-timed language and English a stress-
timed language–, Spanish speakers tend to add extra syllables or swallow sounds to match the expected/desired number
of syllables, especially when it comes to final consonant clusters. Moreover, among many other aspects negatively
affecting pronunciation in English, Spanish speakers tend to fail in pronouncing end consonants accurately or strong
enough and tend to add unnecessary sound preffixes to words which begin with a consonant cluster on s-. To deepen on
these specially problematic aspects, Shoebottom (2011) concedes that Spanish has a strong correspondence between the
sound of a word and its spelling. However, English is irregular in this respect, this causing predictable problems when
Spanish learners write a word they just first meet in spoken language or say a word first met in written language.
According to the difficulties mentioned above, it is essential that we as English teachers give our students the
opportunity to reflect on the way they learn to pronounce and on the way they want to do so, so that with first-hand
impressions we can improve the instruction of pronunciation and comprehension meaningfully, providing them with the
necessary tools to do so independently and in a conscious and profitable way.
C. The Importance of Comprehensibility in Oral English
Pronunciation is a key aspect in the development of oral skills. Proper pronunciation is inherent to any competent
speaker but this competence can (and must) be trained in any non-native speaker. The review of previous literature on
the topic shows that with careful preparation and integration, pronunciation can play a significant role in supporting the
learners’ overall communicative skill (Pourhosein, 2012, p. 119). Nonetheless, the idea that learners should speak and
sound like native speakers is not the trend nowadays, apart from being a rather unrealistic idea. In fact, it is rare that L2
adult learners achieve native-like speech patterns (Moyer, 2004; Scovel, 2000). Moreover, it is difficult to achieve
native-like pronunciation in typical ESL classrooms after childhood (Kang, 2010). As Ur (1996) concedes, the aim of
pronunciation is not to achieve a perfect imitation of native accent, but to get the learner to pronounce accurately
enough to be easily and comfortably comprehensible to other speakers. In fact, as scholars such as Derwing and Munro
(2005) or Goodwin (2001) argue that it is teachers’ role to help ESL learners to set realistic goals for pronunciation
instruction and these goals do not normally target native-like accents.
According to Burns (2003), it is far more important for speakers to be able to achieve intelligibility (the sound
patterns produced by the speaker are recognisable as English) comprehensibility (the meaning of what is said can be
understood by the listener) and interpretability (the purpose of what is said can be understood by the listener). Moreover,
many studies from an English as a second language perspective –such as Howlader’s (2010)– found that mutual
intelligibility, comprehensibility and neutral accent can promote better oral communication. In fact, from the
perspective of World Englishes, mutual intelligibility is a key issue for both listeners and speakers (Kang, 2010)
In order to achieve comprehesibility, both segmental –main focus in the teaching of pronunciation in former EFL
approaches– and suprasegmental features must be paid attention to as the main components of good pronunciation (Fig.
1) and thus they are key aspects to be dealt with in a balanced and complementary way in the pronunciation class.
Therefore, comprehensibility is the key nowadays due to of the increasing demand of communication in English
between the non-native speakers rather than between the native and non-native ones in the world (Howlader, 2010) and
accordingly it must be enhanced and trained.
II. METHOD
A. Context for the Research
This paper puts forward the results obtained from a small-scale pilot study about key aspects, students’ perceptions
and proposals to improve pronunciation and comprehension of oral English. The study population is made up of 48
Spanish students from first year of the Bachelor's Degree in English Studies and enrolled in the compulsory subject EA
0910 Spoken English: Comprehension and Pronunciation (an EFL class focused on pronunciation production and
reception issues). The students belong to three different groups of practice, each of them with a different teacher but
coordinated in terms of contents, methodology and assessment system. The author of this paper taught practice group
number 1 (PR 1) and asked her colleagues from PR 2 and PR 3 to collaborate in the study. Therefore, from the 48
students taking part in the study, 19 belonged to PR 1, 12 to PR 2 and 17 to PR 3.
The classes took place in the language laboratory so that students had at their disposal a wide range of technical
means that tried to make the practice of pronunciation more motivating and dynamic.
According to the objectives made public in the course syllabus of the subject, it focuses on the pronunciation of
English in terms of producing and understanding speech sounds and its main objective is to improve the student’s
productive and receptive skills in the English language. More specifically, the subject deals with: segmental and
suprasegmental phonology, correspondence between phonetics and spelling, discrimination of sounds in isolated words
and in connected speech, and pronunciation practice in specific difficult areas for Spanish speakers. The coursebook
English Pronunciation in Use – Intermediate by Mark Hancock (2012 edition) is the one used in the subject but when
students take part in this second semester subject they are already familiar with the basics of pronunciation since they
have already taken the subject EA0911 English Phonetics and Phonology during the first semester. This initial EA0911
course is supposed to have given the students a solid foundation in the basics of the phonological system of the English
language.
B. Methodology: Questionnaires Administration and Analysis
The methodology employed in this study is a simple and straightforward one: the administration via the electronic
platform of the subjects’ virtual classroom of 3 anonymous questionnaires (see their printed version in Appendix A) to
be voluntarily responded by the students. Students were thus not forced to take part in the study but highly encouraged
to do so: finally, 87% of the students enrolled in the subject took part in it.
The questionnaires were created on the basis of the aspects and phonology-related terminology which was already
familiar to the students, that is, according to the main contents of the coursebook, according to personal interaction with
students during tutorial hours and also according to previous similar questionnaires such as Kang’s (2012), and Akram
and Qureshi’s (2012).
The 3 questionnaires were designed to be answered in less than 45 minutes (in total) and they dealt with different
aspects which I considered to be the foundations of the research and which I grouped as follows:
Questionnaire 1 – Student’s perceptions and feelings
Questionnaire 2 – Materials, methods, tools and contents employed
Questionnaire 3 – Work needed, perceived relevance and improvement suggestions
Questionnaire 1 included 25 items and questionnaire 2 included 30 items to be ranked from 1 (strongly disagree) to 5
(absolutely agree), that is, participants were asked to make scalar judgments on a five-point scale. Questionnaire 3
included a first item to rank different pronunciation-related aspects according to the work needed in them (as personally
perceived by each student) from 1 (more work needed) to 8 (less work needed) and a second item in which they had to
assign importance to these aspects from 1 (not at all) to 5 (a lot). Questions 3-10 in questionnaire 3 were open questions
to reflect and suggest specific action so that qualitative results could be obtained. However, not all the students
answered all the open questions.
The questionnaires were uploaded in the virtual classroom and those students who wanted to participate
anonymously had access to them from March 15 until April 15, 2013. The questionnaires could be answered in a single
session or in more than one since the answers could be saved by the system. Students were explained the mechanics of
the study and its objective so that it became clear to them the importance and benefits of taking part in it. Afterwards,
punctuations and means (quantitative analysis from questionnaires 1, 2 and part of 3) were calculated and qualitative
results and suggestions (second part of questionnaire 3) were analysed in order to obtain the results presented in section
number III.
Obviously, this study may present certain limitations among which we find, for example, the limited sample under
analysis –48 students took part in the study. It is not a big sample but we consider it to be big enough to obtain
representative results. Additionally, it is difficult to control the interest on the part of students when responding. Due to
their format, questionnaires 1 and 2 and part of questionnaire 3 may have been responded at random but the fact of
having given them more than a month to answer, the fact of having made them reflect about the importance of the study
and the fact that the study was voluntary seem to indicate that non-interested students simply did not participate.
III. RESULTS
A. Questionnaires Results
The following paragraphs summarise the results obtained in the 3 questionnaires administered to the 48 students.
Questionnaire 1
91.6% of the students taking part in the study felt concerned about their own pronunciation (item 1) and 100% of
them considered “English comprehension and pronunciation” an important subject in their degree and felt that the
subject would help them to improve their pronunciation (items 2 and 3). As regards item 4, 33.3% of the students agree
with the fact that pronunciation is a key aspect for communication and 66.6% absolutely agree with the statement. In the
same way, 25% show their agreement with the fact that English pronunciation is important for their professional future
and 75% absolutely agree with it (item 5). 91.6% of the students agree or strongly agree with the fact that most of what
they are taught in the subject is relevant for them (item 6) and all of them (50% agree and 50% strongly agree) like
learning English pronunciation (item 7). 91.7% of the students enjoy English pronunciation lessons/classes, so agrees
(66.6) or absolutely agrees (25.1) with item 8, and also a 91.7% of the students enjoy participating in games and tasks in
the English pronunciation class (item 9), so they agree (41, 6%) or strongly agree with the item (50%).
In terms of the insecurity felt by students when they have to speak in English in front of their classmates (item 10)
41.6% of the students felt indecisive whereas another 41.6% agreed or strongly agreed with the fact that they feel
insecure under such a circumstance. 66.6% of the students agreed or strongly agreed with the fact that they could do
much better when speaking in English in front of their classmates but they feel ashamed and insecure so they
deliberately avoid sounding too native-like (item 11). 100% of the learners stated (40% agreed and 80% strongly agreed)
that they wanted to be able to pronounce English just as native speakers (item 12). In fact, a 75% of the surveyed
learners, conceded that it is very frustrating for them not to be able to sound as an English native (item 13). 33.3% of
the students conceded that they were not satisfied with their pronunciation in English –that is, they disagreed with the
fact that they were satisfied with it, according to item 14–, 25% felt indecisive about the statement and 41.6 did feel
satisfied (33.3% agreed and 8.3% strongly agreed).
91.6% of the students agreed or strongly agreed with the fact that if they have a good pronunciation then they will
feel more confident in English (item 15) and as regards item 16, nobody strongly agreed with the fact that pronunciation
skills are innate, in fact 41.6% of the students felt indecisive about it and another 41.6% disagreed or strongly disagreed
with the statement. 66.6% of the students agreed (50%) or strongly agreed (16.6%) with the fact that pronunciation
skills are acquired through practice (item 17).
Item 18 shows a great variety of perspectives: 25% of the students strongly disagree with the fact that their mother
tongue is a handicap for them to pronounce more correctly, 33.3% disagree, 16.6% are indecisive, and 25% agree or
strongly agree with the statement. As regards item 19, 66.6% of the students agreed or strongly agreed with the fact that
knowing the main theoretical aspects of phonetics and phonology does not guarantee a good pronunciation (item 19)
and 25% of them showed their indecision in this respect. 100% of the surveyed students felt satisfied with the effort
they devote to improve their pronunciation (item 20).
In item 21, 33.3% of the students agreed or strongly agreed with the fact that it is frustrating to see how some
classmates have a much better pronunciation than them, and 41.6% felt indecisive about the statement; the remaining
25% disagreed or strongly disagreed. Nobody absolutely agreed with the fact that learning English was too difficult for
them (item 22) and just 8.3% agreed with it whereas 58.3% disagreed with the item. As regards item 23, nobody
strongly agreed with the fact that speaking is the hardest skill to develop but 50% agreed with it; 33.3% felt indecisive
and 16.6% disagreed or strongly disagreed with the statement. Nobody absolutely agreed with item 24 (“I think I will
never feel satisfied with my pronunciation”) but 33.3% of the students agreed with it, 16.6% of them were indecisive
and 50% of them disagreed or strongly disagreed with the statement. Finally, no student felt nervous in the English
pronunciation class (item 25), just 33.3% of them felt indecisive about this aspect.
Questionnaire 2
As regards the results obtained in questionnaire number 2, 91.6% of the students agreed or absolutely agreed with the
fact that pronunciation symbols are useful for learning pronunciation correctly (item 1). 25% of the respondents
absolutely agreed with item 2 (“I think English textbooks can help me to learn English pronunciation”) and 50%
absolutely agreed with it; 16.6% disagreed with the statement and 8.3% were indecisive. Everybody supported the fact
that English videos and audios can help them to learn English pronunciation (item 3), in fact, 75% absolutely agreed
and 25% agreed. 91.6% of the respondents agreed or strongly agreed with the fact that singing songs in English can
improve their pronunciation (item 4) and the same percentage (91.6%) agreed or absolutely agreed with item 5: “I think
that repetition and imitation are important aspects to learn English pronunciation”.
As regards item 6, 50% of the students believe (agree with the fact) that recording themselves is useful to improve
their pronunciation and 33.3% of them absolutely agree with it. As regards the usefulness of printed dictionaries for
learning pronunciation (item 7), 66.6% of the students agree with their usefulness and 16.6% of them strongly agree
with it while another 16.6% feel indecisive. 50% of the respondents feel dubious (indecisive) as regards item 9
(“students should be given more chances to speak in class”) whereas 41.6 agree with it. 66.6% of the students agreed
with the fact that attending classroom activities is useful (item 10) whereas the other 33.3% strongly agreed with it.
58.3% of the respondents absolutely agreed with the fact that the language laboratory is useful for pronunciation classes
(item 11), 25% of them agreed and 16.6% felt indecisive.
As regards particular pronunciation-related aspects, items 12 to 30 try to measure students’ attitude towards them.
For these items, results have been included in the form of figures (Figs. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8) to make them more visual
and illustrative.
Questionnaire 3
The results obtained in Questionnaire 3 have been summarised in the following paragraphs. Regarding the first item,
in order to obtain the final rank of specific aspects student need to work on (according to their own views and
perceptions) the numerical values assigned by students to each item in the ranking have been added up to a total which
has been subsequently divided by the total number of students, that is, the arithmetic mean has been calculated for each
item (shown between brackets) on the basis of the numerical values assigned to them. Accordingly –since 1 implies
more work needed and 8 less work needed– the rank and numerical values obtained have been ( from 1 –more work
needed– to 8 –less work needed–):
1 (2.1) Intonation
2 (2.5) Stress
3/4 (4.4) Vowel sounds
3/4 (4.4) Mouth articulation
5 (5.3) Phonetic transcription production
6/7 (5.6) Consonant sounds
B. Activity-type Proposals
According to the results obtained in the questionnaires, to my own experience in the classroom and to the feedback
and suggestions obtained from students when interacting with them, a series of activity-type proposals have been
developed, a selection of which I present below. Their usefulness and didactic character have been confirmed in the
classroom through their implementation and they are presented here in a general way (just with a brief explanation)
since they admit variation and adaptation to specific needs. They are mostly short, dynamic activities covering a wide
range of pronunciation-related topics which were carried out in the pronunciation classroom together with regular
coursebook activities (once questionnaire results were analysed) and which proved their usefulness and good
acceptance on the part of students. Therefore, the selected activities devised and proposed are:
1. Minimal pairs: a student is provided with a numbered list of minimal pairs. A word from each pair has been
highlighted and the student has to read only the highlighted word from the pair. The rest of the students note down the
word read.
2. Mouthing: first the teacher (as an example) and then a student silently articulate a word by reproducing mouth
position when saying the word aloud. Students have to guess the word which has been silently mouthed.
3. Sit down list: a comprehensive pronunciation list is shown to the whole class. Students stand up and each student
reads aloud a word from the list. If a student fails, then he/she sits down. The last student standing up wins.
4. And the Oscar for the best imitation goes to…: the teacher selects some short movie scenes with an adequate
level of difficulty and provides the students with their transcript. Students watch the scene and make notes if necessary.
Then, three of the students from the class (and the teacher) will play the role of the jury and the other students will
repeat the scene imitating the actor(s) or actress(es) performance. The jury will award the Oscar for the best imitation to
the student who best imitates what has been seen.
5. Dialogue enacting: in groups or pairs students enact self-devised or pre-written dialogues in which different
pronunciation aspects are dealt with.
6. Lyrics: firstly, the students are provided with the lyrics of a song in which some words have been removed.
Students have to fill in the gaps according to what they hear and become familiar with the song. Then, they sing aloud
in class imitating the singer(s).
7. Record yourself: students record themselves reading texts from different genres. Then they listen to themselves
and try to record themselves again correcting the mistakes detected or improving the weak aspects. A peer-review stage
can also be incorporated.
8. Read the transcriptions: students are provided with transcriptions such as ˈ ləndən ɪz ðə ˈkæpətəl əv ðə jʊˈ
naɪtɪd
ˈkɪŋdəm ənd əv ˈɪŋglənd ənd ɪz ˈ wən əv ðə ˈ kiː "ˈwərld ˈ sɪtiːz". Individually or in small groups they have to try
to read the transcriptions and then “decipher” them in written format.
9. Stress-full bingo: the teacher designs and distributes at random a series of pre-elaborated bingo cards with stress
patterns on it (for instance, oOoo is the stress pattern for words such as particular). Then he/she reads aloud a series of
words or sentences and the student with the bingo card that fits the stress patterns of the words/sentences read wins.
10. Riddle reading and recording: students read (at a different speed) a series of riddles and record themselves. They
can also make up their own riddles if preferred.
11. Once upon a time…: a student stands up and the rest of the class pretends they are children listening to a great
story-teller. The student starts telling a story paying much attention to intonation, stress and to the fact of catching
“childrens’” interest.
12. Mirroring: students become aware of mouth articulation by slowly pronouncing a series of words from a list
(proposed by the teacher or by other mates) and looking in a little mirror (they have to bring to class) the way their
tongue, lips and teeth move and articulate to produce the sounds.
13. Correct punctuation can save lives: make students reflect about the importance of punctuation both when
reading and writing by showing to students a series of funny examples such as the ones in Fig. 9. Students may start
reading the examples aloud and then start a debate and/or look for more examples.
Figure 9. Examples of how “pronunciation can save lives” (idea obtained from: http://cybertext.wordpress.com/2012/11/22/a-light-hearted-look-at-
how-punctuation-can-change-meaning/)
14. Identifying sentence focus: a student reads aloud a series of sentences emphasising a different word each time,
that is to say, changing the focus of the sentence in each case. The other the students have to identify where the focus is
in each case. For example:
I can’t believe she told you this!
I can’t believe she told you this!
I can’t believe she told you this!
I can’t believe she told you this!
I can’t believe she told you this!
15. Poetry reading: students have to choose a poem they particularly like and recite it in class. At the end, students
will choose their favorite poetry and the best performance. This can also be done with short theatre fragments or with
other texts from different genres.
Obviously, all these activities admit and benefit from introducing new aspects or adaptations. Teachers have to feel
free to introduce any variable or modification they consider necessary according to their students’ needs since
innovation is a key aspect in order to keep students’ interest.
IV. CONCLUSION
The role of English as the lingua franca nowadays makes it especially relevant the fact of being able to successfully
communicate in English. This communication depends on the fact that mutual intelligibility or comprehensibility exists,
and pronunciation is crucial in this respect.
From the different aspects analysed throughout this paper and from the results obtained in its corresponding research,
it seems relevant to note that –despite the added difficulty arisen from the fact that a second or foreign language is
normally learnt in an artificial environment– pronunciation can be taught and learnt with a wide variety of methods and
activities that make students naturally and confidently improve and progress.
According to the results obtained students are motivated and seem to acknowledge the importance of pronouncing
properly since, otherwise, comprehensibility would be affected and thus communication broken. Affective factors as
well as a positive, reinforcing classroom atmosphere do also play a key role in pronunciation instruction. Realistically
setting goals and reflecting about the feasibility of sounding “absolutely native” is an important aspect to develop and
consider in pronunciation classes in order to avoid unnecessary frustration. In the same way, it is important to show
positive reinforcement to those students with weaker capabilities since it is frustrating for most of them to see how some
classmates have much better pronunciation than them.
As research shows, students emphasise the importance of using audiovisual means to foster imitation patterns and are
aware of the importance of becoming familiar with both segmental and suprasegmental aspects. Students like variation
in class activities as well as being provided with real and natural language models to imitate (together with the more
traditional didactic approach offered by the coursebook). They do also need fun activities which help them to more
naturally deal with pronunciation issues, helping them to forget a bit about the stress of consciously or unconsciously
being subject to evaluation on the part of their peers and the teacher. In this way, students appreciate the effort devoted
by teachers in order to devise activities specifically addressed to the particular needs detected in class. This involvement
on the part of the teacher makes them feel more confident and valued and this positively affects their attitude to the
subject and to the skill under development.
What seems clear is that students have a lot to say in their learning process; they reflect on what is good for them
more than we may think at first sight and asking them is the best way to incorporate their suggestions and perceptions to
our teaching and thus to their learning. Questionnaires such as the ones employed in this study can shed light on the
way students want or need to be taught and even on aspects traditionally problematic or a bit abandoned.
From the results obtained it seem obvious that in a pronunciation class it is fundamental that students feel
comfortable, encouraged to improve and motivated, never pushing them beyond their own will, otherwise, group or
class work will negatively affect the student’s learning process and eagerness instead of fostering intelligibility for use
beyond the classroom.
APPENDIX A. QUESTIONNAIRES
QUESTIONNAIRE 1 - STUDENTS’ PERCEPTIONS AND FEELINGS
AGE _______________ GENDER_________________________
1= strongly disagree 2= disagree 3= indecisive 4=agree 5= absolutely agree
1. I am concerned about my pronunciation.
2. I consider “English comprehension and pronunciation” an important subject in my degree.
3. I think “English comprehension and pronunciation” will help me to improve my pronunciation.
4. I consider pronunciation a key aspect for communication.
5. I think English pronunciation is important for my professional future.
6. I can see the relevance of most of what we are taught in this subject.
7. I like learning English pronunciation.
8. I enjoy my English pronunciation lessons/classes.
______ Stress
______ Intonation
2. How important do you consider the following pronunciation-related aspects to be? (from 1= not at all to 5= a lot)
______ Consonant sounds
______ Vowel sounds
______ Connected speech
______ Phonetic transcription production
______ Phonetic transcription reading
______ Mouth articulation
______ Stress
______ Intonation
3. How would you improve classroom activities?
4. How would you improve students’ participation?
5. How would you improve teacher’s methodology?
6. How would you improve materials?
7. How would you particularly improve your classmates’ pronunciation skills?
8. What specific types of activities would you suggest for improving your pronunciation?
9. Why is pronunciation such a hard issue (in general) for Spanish students?
10. Is there anything you would like to do in class (in order to improve your pronunciation) that has never been done
before?
REFERENCES
[1] Akram, M. and Qureshi, A. H. (2012). Problems in Learning and Teaching English Pronunciation in Pakistan. International
Journal of Research in Linguistics and Lexicography. INTJR-LL-1(4), 43-48.
[2] Burns, A. (2003). Clearly speaking: pronunciation in action for teachers. National Center for English Language Teaching and
Research, Macquaire Universaity, Sydney NSW 2109.
[3] Coe, N. (1987) in Swan, M. & Smith, B. Learner English: A teacher's guide to interference and other problems. Cambridge
University Press.
[4] Case, A. (2012). http://edition.tefl.net/articles/teacher-technique/spanish-speaker-pronunciation-problems/ (accessed 1/07/2013).
[5] Cunningham Florez, M. (1998). Improving Adult ESL Learners’ Pronunciation Skills. ERIC Digest.
[6] Hancock, M. (2003). English Pronunciation in Use. Intermediate. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (course book).
[7] Howlader, M. R. (2010). Teaching English Pronunciation in Countries where English is a Second Language: Bangladesh
Perspective. ASA University Review 4. 2, 233-244.
[8] Jones, R. H. (2002). Beyond listen and repeat: Pronunciation teaching materials and theories of second language acquisition. In
J. C. Richards & W. A. Renandya, Methodology in language teaching: An anthology of current practice. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 12-16.
[9] Kang, O. (2010). ESL learners’ attitudes toward pronunciation instruction and varieties of English. In J. Levis & K. LeVelle
(eds.), Proceedings of the 1st Pronunciation in Second Language Learning and Teaching Conference. Ames, IA: Iowa State
University, 105-118.
[10] Moyer, A. (2004). Age, accent and experience in second language acquisition. Clevedon, England: Multilingual Matters.
[11] Odlin, T. (1989). Language transfer: Cross-linguistic influence in language learning. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
[12] Pourhosein Gilakjani, A. (2012). A Study of Factors Affecting EFL Learners' English Pronunciation Learning and the
Strategies for Instruction. International Journal of Humanities and Social Science 2. 3, 119-128.
[13] Scovel, T. (2000). A critical review of the critical period research. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 20, 213-223.
[14] Shoebottom, P. (2011). http://esl.fis.edu/grammar/langdiff/spanish.htm (accessed 1/07/2013).
[15] Ur, P. (1996). A course in language teaching: practice and theory. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press.
Nuria Edo Marzá was born in Spain in 1980. She received her PhD in English Philology from University Jaume I (Castellón,
Spain) in 2008. She also received a master’s degree in Terminology in 2009 from Universitat Pompeu Fabra (Barcelona, Spain). She
is currently a professor of the English Studies Department at Universitat Jaume I (Castellón, Spain) but she also worked as a lecturer
and researcher from 2009 to 2011 at University of Valencia (Spain).
She is the author of the book The Specialised Lexicographical Approach: a Step Further in Specialised Dictionary Making (2009)
Peter Lang, and of the health-related volumes Spoken English for the medical professional (2011), English for Patient and non-
clinical Hospital Staff (2011) and English for Pharmacists (2011), all of them published by Editorial Formación Alcalá. She is also
the author of the research paper “The generation of active entries in a specialised, bilingual, corpus-based dictionary of the ceramics
industry: what to include, why and how” (2009). Ibérica, 18, 43-71.
Dr. Edo research interests include the fields of specialised languages, terminology, terminotics, specialised lexicography an d ESP
teaching and learning among others.