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149 1. Introduction In recent years, I have been surprised at the number of university students who pronounce English with heavy katakana pronunciation (c.f., Katayama, 2010) when required to make brief presentations in class. In the most severe cases, the students’ presentations sound more like Japanese than English, despite the use of English words due largely to the transfer of L1 suprasegmental patterns (i.e., stress, length, tone and intonation). They tend to pronounce each word separately with [High Low]—] Low High] Japanese pitch-accent instead of in word units with English stress-timed rhythm (Katayama, 2010). Recently, English pedagogy in Japanese secondary schools has focused on communicative skills rather than strict grammatical accuracy, yet the teaching of pronunciation has received insufficient focus (Uchida & Sugimoto, 2018; Katayama, 2010; Yuzawa, 2007, Ueno, 1998). As Katayama (2010) laments, it seems that teachers have forgotten that pronunciation, especially the suprasegmental or prosodic features of English, are key to the production of intelligible oral communication. Ideally, there should be a full one- to two-semester first year university class devoted to the teaching of English pronunciation that would intensively cover all of the problematic sounds for Japanese speakers of English and give them ample opportunity to practice (c.f., Grate, 1974; Sell & Cosgrave, 1975), starting with perception training, understanding of tongue position, jaw and mouth movement and shape, and minimal pair practice (Yuzawa, 2007), then preceding to the study and practice of suprasegmental patterns in connected speech. Such a course should employ the use of technology such as the BBC interactive phonemic chart (British Council, 2009) and a self-analytical approach, such as Nagasawa’s (1994) which requires students to use mirrors both at class and at home to check mouth-shapes, a tape recorder at home to record and compare their own pronunciation to that of a native model as well as a practice diary. In class, the students pronounce the target material for the teacher’s evaluation. If their performance is acceptable, they can move on to the next assignment, if not, they must repeat the assignment again. However, given the current curriculum and time constraints, such a robust university pronunciation course is not feasible. Instead, the author has chosen to address two of the most problematic areas of pronunciation: segmental vowel phonemes and voice inflection. The goal is not perfect pronunciation, but intelligible pronunciation. Although he has applied this approach in both Presentation Skills and English Communication I and II, the focus in this paper will be limited to English Communication I and II, which is a reading class. In the spring semester of this class, students read short stories from the SRA Reading Laboratory (McGraw-Hill Education, 2015), and in the fall semester they read graded extended reading books. In both semesters, students receive training in pronouncing segmental vowel phonemes, and voice inflection (Harrington & LeBeau, 1996), and then are asked to apply what they have learned in three class presentations. Exploring the Teaching of Pronunciation in a University Reading Class David M. MOSHER Key Words: teaching English pronunciation, L1 suprasegmental transfer, segmental and suprasegmental training, intelligibility, English Communication I & II

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Page 1: Exploring the Teaching of Pronunciation in a University Reading … · 2019. 4. 29. · 2. Segmental Pronunciation Training: American English Vowels The intelligible pronunciation

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1. Introduction

Inrecentyears, Ihavebeensurprisedat thenumberofuniversitystudentswhopronounceEnglishwithheavykatakana pronunciation (c.f.,Katayama,2010)when required tomakebriefpresentationsinclass.Inthemostseverecases,thestudents’presentationssoundmorelikeJapanesethanEnglish,despitetheuseofEnglishwordsduelargelytothetransferofL1suprasegmentalpatterns(i.e.,stress,length,toneandintonation).Theytendtopronounceeachwordseparatelywith[HighLow]—]LowHigh]Japanesepitch-accentinsteadofinwordunitswithEnglishstress-timedrhythm(Katayama,2010).Recently,EnglishpedagogyinJapanesesecondaryschoolshasfocusedoncommunicativeskillsratherthanstrictgrammaticalaccuracy,yettheteachingofpronunciationhasreceivedinsufficientfocus(Uchida&Sugimoto,2018;Katayama,2010;Yuzawa,2007,Ueno,1998).AsKatayama(2010)laments,itseemsthatteachershaveforgottenthatpronunciation,especiallythesuprasegmentalorprosodicfeaturesofEnglish,arekeytotheproductionofintelligibleoralcommunication. Ideally, thereshouldbea fullone-totwo-semester firstyearuniversityclassdevotedtotheteachingofEnglishpronunciationthatwouldintensivelycoveralloftheproblematicsoundsforJapanesespeakersofEnglishandgivethemampleopportunitytopractice(c.f.,Grate,1974;Sell&Cosgrave,1975),startingwithperceptiontraining,understandingoftongueposition,jawandmouthmovementandshape,andminimalpairpractice(Yuzawa,2007),thenprecedingtothestudyandpracticeofsuprasegmentalpatterns inconnectedspeech.Suchacourseshouldemploytheuseof technologysuchas theBBCinteractivephonemicchart(BritishCouncil,2009)andaself-analyticalapproach,suchasNagasawa’s(1994)whichrequiresstudentstousemirrorsbothatclassandathometocheckmouth-shapes,ataperecorderathometorecordandcomparetheirownpronunciationtothatofanativemodelaswellasapracticediary.Inclass, thestudentspronouncethetargetmaterial fortheteacher’sevaluation.Iftheirperformanceisacceptable,theycanmoveontothenextassignment,ifnot,theymustrepeattheassignmentagain. However, given the current curriculumand time constraints, such a robust universitypronunciation course isnot feasible. Instead, theauthorhas chosen toaddress twoof themostproblematicareasofpronunciation:segmentalvowelphonemesandvoice inflection.Thegoal isnotperfectpronunciation,but intelligiblepronunciation.Althoughhehasappliedthisapproach inbothPresentationSkillsandEnglishCommunicationIandII, the focus inthispaperwillbe limitedtoEnglishCommunicationIandII,whichisareadingclass.Inthespringsemesterofthisclass,studentsreadshortstories fromtheSRAReadingLaboratory(McGraw-HillEducation,2015),andinthefallsemester theyreadgradedextendedreadingbooks. Inbothsemesters,studentsreceivetraining inpronouncingsegmentalvowelphonemes,andvoiceinflection(Harrington&LeBeau,1996),andthenareaskedtoapplywhattheyhavelearnedinthreeclasspresentations.

ExploringtheTeachingofPronunciationinaUniversityReadingClass

DavidM.MOSHERKeyWords:teachingEnglishpronunciation,L1suprasegmentaltransfer,segmentaland

suprasegmentaltraining,intelligibility,EnglishCommunicationI&II

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2. Segmental Pronunciation Training: American English Vowels

TheintelligiblepronunciationofEnglishvowelsounds isprobablythemostdifficultareaforJapaneseandmanyotherspeakersofEnglishtolearn.OnereasonisthatJapanesehasonlyfivevowelphonemes.Chinese,mostRomancelanguagesandTagaloghaveonlyfivetoeightvowels(Celce-Murcia,Brinton&Goodwin,2010).Insharpcontrast,EnglishhasatleastfivetimesasmanyvowelsasJapanese.Yuzawa(2007)statesBBCEnglish(formerlyreceivedpronunciation)has20vowels.NorthAmericanEnglishhas15stressedvowels,sixrelaxedvowelsandthreedipthongs (Celce-Murcia,etal.,2010).VowelsarealsothecorepartofEnglishsyllables.TheyarethepartofEnglishwordswhichreceivethespeaker’sstress,andwhichcommunicatethespeaker’sfeelingandemotion.Englishvowels,especiallylongvowels,havemoredynamicmouthandtonguemovementsthanJapanesevowels,andonevowelmaycontaintwodistinctivelydifferentsounds.Forexample,theeilongvowelsound,asin“bait”,containsthesoundoftheletter“a”andtheletter“e”.AllofthesedifferencesmakethepronunciationofvowelsverydifficultforJapanesespeakersofEnglish.Yet,reasonablyaccuratevowelpronunciationisessentialforproducingcomprehensibleEnglish. Forvowelpronunciationtraining,IhaveadoptedSellandCosgrave’s(1975)V-chartforAmericanEnglishvowelsounds (SeeAppendix1). In thischart, thereare twelvevowelphonemesandthreedipthongs,thecombinationoftwovowelphonemes.Thischartmakesiteasyforstudentstovisualizethepositionandmovementofthetongueandjaw,andtheshapeofthemouth.Thevowelatthetopleftcornerofthechart(i:)ispronouncedwiththetonguehighandinthefrontofthemouth,andthemouthisonlyopenslightlyintheshapeofasmile.AsoneprogressesdowntheleftsideoftheV-chart,thetonguegraduallymoveslowerandtowardsthemiddleofthemouth.Atthebottomofthechartisthevowela:asinhot.Herethetongueisatthebottom,mid-partofthemouth,thejawispulledlow,andthemouthisopenedwiderthanforanyothervowelphoneme.Asoneprogressesupwards,alongtherightsideofthechart,thetonguemovesprogressivelyfurtherbackandupwardsinthemouth,andthelipsbecomeprogressivelymorerounded.Theu:phoneme,asinboot,atthetopleftcornerispronouncedwiththetonguehighandfarbackinthemouth.Thelipsareroundedtightly.Whenthevowelsoundfor“but”ispronounced,thetongueisinthemiddleofthemouth.Themouthisopenedmid-wide,andthejawisrelaxed.Theersound,asinbird,istreatedasavowelsinceitsharesallthemajorvowelfeatures.Thetongueis inthehighmiddlepartofthemouth,thelipsareslightlyroundedandthetonguedoesnottouchanypartofthemouth. AsexplainedintheV-chart,sevenofthetwelvevowelsarelongvowelsandtheotherfiveareshort.Inthephoneticscriptusedinthechart,longvowelsconsistoftwosymbolsandshortvowelsconsistofone.Inclass,thelongvowelsoundsarepronouncedwithexaggeratedlengthandvolumeasifinslowmotiontodramatizethephoneticcharacterofEnglishvowels.Nagasawa(1994)suggestspronouncingEnglishphonemesthreetimesaslongandstrongasnormal.Thisoftenamusesstudentsturningwhatcouldbeatediousexerciseintoanentertainingone,andgivingstudentsmoretimetonotethelocationandmovementofthetongue,thelipsandjaw.Thelongvowelsoundscanthenbecontrastedwiththeneighboringshortvowelsounds,forexamplei:andi,eiandeandsoon.Thevowelsanddiphthongsarepronouncedboth in isolationandbetweenconsonants,suchas“b”and“d”, to formcommonfamiliarwords.

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3. Suprasegmental Pronunciation Training: Voice Inflection

Vowelpronunciationtrainingisthenfollowedwithvoice inflectiontraining,a limitedtypeofsuprasegmentalpronunciationtrainingfollowingHarringtonandLeBeau(1996).Threevoiceinflectionfeaturesaretaughtandpracticed:stressing,stretchingandpausing.Students listentoandrepeatasimplesentencelike“I’vegotabigdog”withemphasisonthebignessofthedog,andnotthefacttheownerhasadog.InHarringtonandLeBeau,thissentenceisillustratedwiththreedifferentdogownersaccompaniedwithprogressivelybiggerdogs.First, forstresspractice, it ispointedoutthatprimarysentencestresscomespreciselyontheshortvowelsoundof i inbig.Optionally,theblendedspeechof“gota,”asingodda,canalsobetaughtheretoshowthatweaklystressedwordsarespokenmoremuchmorequicklythanstressedwords,andhighlightthestress-timedrhythmofEnglish.Second,thenotionofstretching(i.e.,stress-timed)istaught.Thesamesentenceispronouncedwithgreateremphasisbystretchingthe ivowelsoundinbig,asin“No,I’vegotab-i-i-i-gdog.”Finally,studentsarethentaughtthatpausesplacedbeforewordsandphrasesthatonewishestostressareusedtoemphasistherelativeimportanceof thewordwhich isstressed (andstretched).Withslashmarks indicatingapause, thesentencecanthenbepronouncedassuch,“No//I’ve/gotaB-I-I-I-I-Gdog!” Studentsarethentaughtthatcertainwords,suchasnumbers,actionverbs,descriptivewords,comparisonwordsandnegativewordstendtoreceivesentencestressinEnglish.Theyrepeatasmallnumberofsentencesaftertheinstructor,andthenpracticetheminpairsorsmallgroupsbeforebeingaskedtoperformfortheclass.SincepronouncingEnglishsentenceswithnative-liketime-stresswillseemunnaturalandevenuncomfortabletomany,asenseofexaggeratedplayfulness isencouraged.ThroughsuchpracticeitishopedthatstudentswillbegintofirmlygraspthefactthatEnglishwordsarestress-timed;whereas,Japanesewordsaresyllable-stressed(Uchida&Sugimoto,2018). Alternatively,Katayama(2010)saysEnglishwordshaveintensity-stressasopposedtoJapanesepitch-stress.ConnectedEnglish,moreover,hasstress-timedrhythm,inwhichcontentwordsreceivestrongstressandfunctionwordsreceiveweakstressorareblendedwiththesurroundingcontentwords(Uchida&Sugimoto,2018;Nagasawa,1994). Althoughtherules forsentencestresscanbecomplex,simplevoice inflectionexercisescanhighlightimportantprosodicfeaturesofspokenEnglish,providingafoundationforpracticewithmoreextendedshortstoriesandtexts.

4. Oral Readings

Thenextstep istotrainstudentstoapplywhattheyhave learnedtoshortstoriesandbookexcerpts.Thisnotonlysuitsareadingclasswell,butisimportantbecauseresearchersfindthatevenwhenstudentsareableto“perfectly”pronouncewordsinsegmentalpronunciationtasks,theyareunabletopronouncethesamewordswell insuprasegmentaltasksofsentenceorparagraphlength(Kumar,2015).Therefore,bothsegmentalandsuprasegmentalpracticeseemstobenecessary(Ueno,1998). Inthespringsemester,ashortstoryisselectedfromtheSRAReadingLaboratory,andinthefallsemester,ashortpassageisexcerptedfromHannah and the Hurricane(SeeAppendix2),whichthewholeclasshasread.Sincethebasicprocedureisthesame,onlythefallsemesteroralreadingtaskwillbeexplainedhere.Intheexcerptedtext,wordstressisindicatedwithstressmarks(′),stretchingisindicatedbydoubleunderlines(sixteen),shortpausesareindicatedbysingleslashes(/)andlongerpausesarebydoubleslashes(//).

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First,thevoiceinflectionmarkingisexplainedtothestudents,andtheyareaskedtorepeataftertheteacher.Theteacherhighlightstheintonationalphrase(Yuzawa,2007),andsentencestress,andthecharacteristicstretchingofthevowelssothatstudentscanhearhowEnglishvowelsoundsareinflected.Thedramaticeffectofpauses isalsodemonstratedbothtoshowhowpausesareused inEnglishtohighlightthemostimportantinformation,andtohelpstudentstopacethemselvesaswellastoprovidethemwithrelativelyeasyandnaturalplacestomakeeyecontactwiththeiraudience.Shadowingisalsoemployedtohelpstudentsgetabetterfeelforwhatformoststudentsisstilltheveryforeign,perhapsuncomfortable,stress-timedrhythm(Nagasawa,1994)ofEnglish. Next, studentsareplaced inpairs (orsmallgroups) toprepare for theiroralpresentation.Theteachercancirculateandhelpasnecessarybymodelingpronunciation,stress,stretchingandpauses.Whenstudentsdonotknowthepronunciationofaword,theyarealsoencouragedtocheckthepronunciationandstresspatternbylookingthewordupontheirsmartphoneorelectronicdictionaries.Bydoingso, theycanvisuallynotewhichsyllablesreceiveprimaryandsecondarystressandclicktheaudiobuttontohearstandardAmericanorBritishpronunciationsof thewords.AsUchidaandSugjiyamapointout,althoughdictionariesareanexcellentclassroomtoolforteachingpronunciationandwordstress,itisatoolthatisseldomusedbyjuniorhighschoolJapaneseteachersofEnglish(2018). Afterrehearsinginpairs,pairsofstudentscometothefrontoftheclasstoreadtheHannahandtheHurricaneexcerptaloudforassessment(SeeAppendix3).OnestudentreadspartAandtheotherreadspartB.Studentsdotheoralreadinginpairsandareallowedtositinordertoreduceperformanceanxiety.Students’performancesareassessedonmainlythreefeaturesoftheirpronunciation: (a)thequalityandclarityoftheloudnessandpitchofwordstress,(b)thestretchingandlengthofeachstress,and(c)theuseofpauses,aswellastheiroverallrhythmandfluency.Fortheoralreading,eyecontactisencouraged,butnotassessed.Goodpostureis,however,taughtandformsapartoftheassessmentalongwithevidenceofoveralleffort.Tenpointsismaximum,andstudentsaregenerallyassessedquiteeasilyandgivenplentyofpositivefeedback.Thegoalistocreatearelaxed,funatmosphereforthemtoexperimentwithdevelopingadegreeofcomfortwiththestress-timedrhythmofEnglish.Inlinewiththisgoal,someplayfulexaggerationofthegreaterlength,loudnessandpitchofEnglishstressisencouraged.

5. Book Sharing Reports

Sincethespringsemester“storysharing”reportsandthebooksharingreportsfollowthesamebasicprocedure,onlythebookreportswillbedescribedinthisarticle.Foreachextendedbookthatthestudentsread,theyarerequiredtowriteashortreportof30to60wordsintheirreadingjournal.Fromtheirjournalstudentschooseonebook,andwritealongerreportaboutthebooktosharewiththeclass.Inthepast,studentswereaskedtodooralreportsontwobooksthattheyhadread.Butsincetheauthorhasbeguntostresstheteachingofpronunciation,studentsareaskedtodoreportsonjustonebookintwophases,referredtohereafterasBookSharingIandII.ForBookSharingI,studentssummarizethebooktheyhavereadbothinEnglishandinJapanese.TheythenselectafavoriteproseordialogpassageandcopyitbeforeexplainingwhytheylikethepassagetheyhavechoseninsomedetailinbothEnglishandJapanese.ByhavingthestudentswriteinJapaneseandinEnglish,itispossiblefortheinstructortocorrecttheirEnglishwithoutmeetingindividuallywithstudentstoclarifytheintendedmeaningoftheirEnglish.

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FirstinBookSharingI,theinstructoronlymakesminimalEnglishcorrectionsusuallyinclass,andstudentsareaskedtoapplytheirknowledgeofEnglishvoiceinflectionandmarktheEnglishpartsoftheirbooksharingforstress,stretchingandpausing.Oncetheyhavedonethis,theyrehearsefortheirpresentationtotheclass individuallyor inpairs.Fortheirpresentations,theyareallowedtositandreadtheirreport,althoughgoodpostureandeyecontactatpausepointsisencouraged.Aswiththeoralreadingpresentation,studentsareassessedprimarilyonvoiceinflection,althoughsomeweightisgiventoefforttomakeeyecontactandtomaintainagoodposture(SeeAppendix4).Aftertheirpresentations,studentsturnintheirBookSharingIreporttobecorrected. ForBookSharingII,studentsarerequiredtocorrectandrevisethesummariesandreactionstotheirfavoritebookpassages,whichusuallymeansaddingsomemoredetailtotheirreport.Inaddition,theyarerequiredtoeitherrecommendornotrecommendtheirbooktotheirclassmates.Oncestudentshaverevisedtheirreports,theyareaskedtomarkthemforvoiceinflectionandgiventimetorehearseindividuallyand/orinpairsandsmallgroups.Theyarealsoencouragedtoasktheteacherandtousetheirdictionariestocheckthepronunciationandwordstressofanydifficultwords.Sincethis isthethirdandfinalclasspresentation,itisgenerallyweightedatleastfivepercentmorethantheothertwopresentations.Aswiththeothertwopresentations,intelligiblepronunciationandvoiceinflectionareanimportantpartoftheinstructor’sassessment.However,thistimestudentsarealsorequiredtostandandtomaintaingoodpostureandeyecontact.Tokeepthingssimple,writtenreportsandoralpresentationsareassessedseparately.

6. Conclusion

Theapproachtoteachingpronunciationdescribedhereseemstohavesomepositiveeffectsbothonstudents’pronunciationandvoiceinflectionaswellasontheirconfidenceinmakingEnglishpresentations.Increasingthepresentationtaskdifficultylevelgraduallyandallowingstudentstomaketwopresentationsononebookseemstobothreduceperformanceanxietylevelsandevenbuildsomeexcitementregardingthefinalreport.AsNagasawa(1994)notes,readingaloudpracticeisnotonlyessential,butitisalsoarelativelyeasystartingpointforlearningandpracticingsegmentalandsuprasegmentalpronunciationinEnglish. Thechallengegoingforwardisto increasetheeffectivenessofpronunciationtrainingwithintheconstraintsofonceaweek90-minuteclasses.OnewaymaybetointroduceminimalpairtrainingthatfocusesonthemostproblematicvowelphonemesforJapanesespeakersasanextensionofthevowelpronunciationtrainingdescribedinsectiontwo.Thiscouldbefollowedbyshortlisteningdiscriminationexercises.Thensomeofthesamephonemescouldbereviewedusingcontextualizedminimalpairs;thatis,shiftingfromsegmentaltosuprasegmentaltraining.Iftimepermits,theteachingofasmallnumberofconsonantpairs,suchasthosethatCatford’sresearch(Celce-Murciaetal.,2010;Ueno,1998)indicatehavehighfunctionalloadcouldbeadded.Theuseoftonguetwisterswouldbeyetanotherwaytoimprovestudentstraining.Theywouldaddvarietyandenablestudentstoreviewpreviouslytargetedphonemeswhileworkingonimprovingtheirstress-timedrhythmatthesentencelevel. Independent,on-demandpronunciationshouldalsobeconsidered.StudentscouldbeintroducedtotheBritishCouncil’s(2009;Kumar,2015)downloadableinteractivephonemicchartintheclassroom,afterwhichtheycouldaccessitontheirowninsideoroutsideofclasstoreviewthepronunciationofvariousphonemesondemand.Therearealso freeonlinevideosandpronunciation lessonsavailable

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forstudentsthatcouldbesimilarlyusedinsideoroutsideoftheclassroom(c.f.,SpeakMethod,2010).Encouragingandtrainingstudentsintheuseofbothelectronicandsmartphonedictionariestocheckthepronunciationandwordstressofnewvocabularyitemsasmentionedbeforeisoneoftheeasiestandmostpowerfulwaystofosterindependentlearning. Finally,theuseofbeforeandafterrecordingsofstudentsreadingashortpassagecouldnotonlybeanexcellentwaytoassessstudents’progress,buttomotivatethemtoworkhardertoimprovetheirpronunciationskillsatthesuprasegmental level (c.f.,Nagasawa,1994).Theissue,ofcourse, istime.However,thismightbeovercomebystudentsusingthevoicerecordingfeaturesontheirsmartphones.

References:

BritishCouncil.(2009).Phonemic Chart.RetrievedNovember24,2018,fromTeachingEnglish:https://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/article/phonemic-chart.

Celce-Murcia,M.,Brinton,D.M.,Goodwin,J.M., (withGriner,B.) (2010).Teaching Pronunciation; A

Course Book and Reference Guide, 2nd Edition.CambridgeUniversityPress.Escott,J.(1995).Hannah and the Hurricane.Harlow,England:PearsonEducationLimited.Grate,H.G.(1974).English Pronunciation Exercises for Japanese Students.NewYork:RegentsPublishing

Company.Harrington,D.&LeBeau,C.(1996). Speaking of Speech: Basic Presentation Skills for Beginners.Tokyo:

MacmillanLanguagehouse.Katayama,T.(2010).ASuprasegmentalThresholdforL2Pronunciation.Research Bulletin for English

Teaching, 7,1-23.Kumar,K. (2015).ProgressTracking;ImprovingEnglishPronunciationforJapaneseL2Learnersof

EnglishthroughGroupWorkandPeerReview.The Journal of Nagasaki University of Foreign Studies,

19,37-46.McGraw-HillEducation(2015).SRAreadinglaboratory.Retrievedfromhttp://www.srareadinglabs.com/

print/pages/home.php.Nagawawa,K.(1994).AnAnalyticalApproachtoTeachingPronunciationtoAdultLearnersofEnglish.

Research Bulletin for English Teaching, 25,93-104.Sell,D.&Cosgrave,D.P.(1975).Pronunciation Manual for Japanese Speakers.Kobe:SeidoLanguage

Institute.SpeakMethod.(2010).PronunciationinEnglish500Words.RetrievedNovember24,2018https://www.

speakmethod.com/500wordsintroduction.html.Uchida,Y.&Sugimoto,J. (2018).ASurveyofPronunciationInstructionbyJapaneseTeachersof

English:PhoneticKnowledgeandTeachingPractice.Journal of the Tokyo University Marine Science

and Technology, 14,65-75.Ueno,N. (1998).TeachingEnglishPronunciation toJapaneseEnglishMajors:AComparisonofA

Suprasegmental-OrientedandASegmental-OrientedTeachingApproach.Research Bulletin for

English Teaching, 29,207-225.Yuzawa,N.(2007).TeachingEnglishPronunciation.The Economic Journal of TCUE, 50,95-107.

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Appendix 1: Vowel Chart

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Appendix 2: Voice Infection Marked Pair Oral Reading

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Appendix 3: Voice Inflection Assessment Sheet

Speaker No.Name:

Stress(Loudness/High) 123+Stretching(Length+Stress) 123+Pausing 123+Posture/Effort 123+

1-4 = < 5 4 - 5 = 6 6-8 = 7 9 - 10 = 8 11 - 12 = 9 12+ = 10

Appendix 4: Book Sharing I and II Assessment Sheet

Speaker No.Name:

Stress(Loudness/High) 123+Stretching(Length+Stress) 123+Pausing 123+Posture 123+EyeContact 123+OverallEffort

1-4 = < 5 4 - 5 = 6 6-8 = 7 9 - 10 = 8 11 - 12 = 9 12+ = 10