Abstract
Abstract
Integration of pronunciation into content courses is appealing because of its potential in helping learners apply
their developing pronunciation skills in spontaneous speech. However, the effectiveness of pronunciation instruction (PI) when it
is integrated still needs to be demonstrated. This study evaluates whether a group receiving integrated PI (targeting
suprasegmentals) improved in controlled and spontaneous speech tasks, compared to a group who did not receive any specific PI. We
measured improvements as comprehensibility ratings and proportion of perceived word stress and vowel reduction errors. The results
show that integration appears to be beneficial overall, including in spontaneous speech tasks when comprehensibility is measured.
We interpret these findings considering the different tasks used and examine the contribution of the specific instructional
approach (form-focused with communicative contextualization) to the observed changes between pre- and post-test.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Education,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
2 articles.
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