Affiliation:
1. University of British Columbia
Abstract
Abstract
The present study uses an acoustic analysis to examine the effects of implicit and explicit pronunciation
instruction on the acquisition of German final devoicing in the L2 classroom. Twenty-nine English-speaking L2 learners of German
at a North American university were assigned to an implicit or explicit condition. Learner speech samples were recorded, following
a pre/post/delayed-post-test design. Four acoustic correlates of final and medial obstruent voicing were analyzed to establish the
degree to which underlyingly voiced word-final stops were phonetically devoiced. Results indicate that learners in the explicit
condition significantly outperformed learners in the implicit condition, with all four acoustic measures signaling significantly
greater word-final devoicing by the post-test in the explicit condition. Orthography, declarative knowledge, and level of
awareness are hypothesized as factors that influenced the acquisition process. The study calls for additional acoustic work on the
effects of different instructional practices on German L2 pronunciation.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Education,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
1 articles.
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