时间:2018-12-16 作者:英语课 分类:2016年VOA慢速英语(六)月


英语课

Improve Your Pronunciation By 'Shadowing' Others


Many English learners can improve their pronunciation by listening carefully to native English speakers and trying to match the up-and-down movement of their sentences.


That is the opinion of Marla Yoshida, an English as a Foreign Language teacher at the University of California, Irvine.


Yoshida wants English learners to look for details that are important to native speakers. These details are not only sounds, she notes. Native speakers also communicate by using pauses, and by saying some words more forcefully than others.


As a result, native speakers might not understand an English learner even if the learner pronounces sounds correctly.


The problem with 'listening and repeating'


Yoshida says that English learners often study pronunciation by listening and repeating something from a recording 1.


Yoshida says that English learners need to do more than listen and repeat in order to improve their pronunciation:


“I've gradually gotten really interested in pronunciation because it's something that students have trouble with, but they don't always get a lot of really good instruction in it. They just have someone say 'Listen to this recording and repeat … and now, aren't you better?' No! You're not necessarily better. It takes more than that.”


The problem with listen and repeat, says Yoshida, is that when people repeat, they are often not trying to sound like the other person.


“You think that when students are repeating after the teacher, or whatever, they're trying to sound exactly like that person, but they're not.


The sounds that you hear go into your brain … and your brain interprets them or filters them through the sound system of your own language, and what your brain ends up understanding is not everything – it's not what the speaker intended…


You have to try to get past that filter and hear all of the details that are important to someone else.


So you have to try to duplicate what the person is saying."


What details should you try to copy when you listen to an English speaker? Among others, the important details include pauses or breaths, which words to emphasize -- or give special attention to, and intonation 2 – the up and down movement of your voice as you speak.


English speakers, in particular, use a broad range of up and down movements in their voices. These movements can be difficult for English learners to recognize and understand.


Native English speakers might have difficulty understanding English learners when learners use a narrow range of their voice. In other words, native speakers have fewer vocal 3 restrictions 4 when they are speaking. English learners also may use intonation patterns that are different from those in Standard English.


Studying how native speakers use intonation will help English learners better understand what native speakers do with their voices.


Practical tips:


If English learners want to start improving their pronunciation, Yoshida suggests that they do an activity called shadowing.


“Shadowing means finding a short audio or video clip that you like… that's maybe 30 seconds long, one minute long, at most two minutes long, and listen to it. Listen to it a couple of times to get the meaning, and to hear where the speaker pauses, and what they emphasize … and what the intonation sounds like – because those are really important things too – not just the sounds. Pronunciation is much more than saying each sound correctly because you can say each sound correctly and still sound really hard to understand…


So, find a short clip, listen to it, mark things that you notice, then listen a few more times just to sort of let those sounds become a part of your brain, and then start imitating. And imitate trying to sound exactly like that person.”


What does shadowing look like?


Here is a short example of what a shadowing activity could look like.


The example comes from Martha Kolln's book Rhetorical Grammar:


"One of the most important aspects of your expertise 5 with sentences is your sense of rhythm."


Listen to the sentence several times.


Then try to mark the intonation of the voice. Listen for emphasized words.



1 recording
n.录音,记录
  • How long will the recording of the song take?录下这首歌得花多少时间?
  • I want to play you a recording of the rehearsal.我想给你放一下彩排的录像。
2 intonation
n.语调,声调;发声
  • The teacher checks for pronunciation and intonation.老师在检查发音和语调。
  • Questions are spoken with a rising intonation.疑问句是以升调说出来的。
3 vocal
adj.直言不讳的;嗓音的;n.[pl.]声乐节目
  • The tongue is a vocal organ.舌头是一个发音器官。
  • Public opinion at last became vocal.终于舆论哗然。
4 restrictions
约束( restriction的名词复数 ); 管制; 制约因素; 带限制性的条件(或规则)
  • I found the restrictions irksome. 我对那些限制感到很烦。
  • a snaggle of restrictions 杂乱无章的种种限制
5 expertise
n.专门知识(或技能等),专长
  • We were amazed at his expertise on the ski slopes.他斜坡滑雪的技能使我们赞叹不已。
  • You really have the technical expertise in a new breakthrough.让你真正在专业技术上有一个全新的突破。
标签: VOA慢速英语
学英语单词
acanthis flammea
actionuranium series
ad vitam
adjacent plate
anallatic lens
ane
annual average temperature
antenna tilt error
Aougoundou, L.
audio compressors
Baroghil Pass
bell rock (inchcape rock)
biometric reader
Brahmany bull
breaking down stand
Calophyllum changii
Capitoline Museums
carolare (italy)
carree
chain type potato lifter
cold end corrosion
collaborative-filtering
control rod drive package
controlled work
counter-evolution
crack initiation
curly-leafed
cystic ameloblastoma
deboosted
dibutyl xanthogen disulfide
differential treatment
diod.
division of responsibility
drospirenone
duct cancer
Egana
external subroutine name
fissocantharis taiwana
fulcral
fusarium subglutinans
glockners
gorditas
gotta-have-it
gray cast-iron brake shoe
harby
heat pump drier
here-today
hirudinal
income from penalties
intertuberal diameter
knock ... out
landammann
Leonhardt system
limiting point of sequence
luminance efficiency
manus valga
marble figure coating
Maria Callas
me-and
medicant
Mentba spicata L.
methyl para-cresol
miscellaneous service charges
molecular mechanism
Morikawa
nailpolish
nematic alignment
network analogy
non-nationals
nonwalking
optical transition
Oswald Mosley
Pasteur, Louis
perovskite
pigeon-hearted
poliotelium hyalospora(sawaea)mains
pornulate
pressurizing and drain valve
preverts
priority queue
radar telescope
relative luminosity factor
rememorized
river water
rolling stabilization
roof pergola
self-rising
self-timers
statement of changes in working capital
steam-roll
tanzie
time slip
tooth error
total air-fuel ratio
trans-Golgi-network
twin-deck vessel
two-high pull-over mill
unfishiness
urgent meteorological danger report
video equalizer
weak force
wheelmounted