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Native Teachers can't Fix Pronunciation - John Levis
Manage episode 468942300 series 2926997
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Learners can think a native teacher is a vaccine against poor pronunciation. Equally, native teachers can be misinformed in thinking that students should just follow them.
We dive into pronunciation, intelligibility, and teacher effects on learner performance with the great John Levis.
John is Professor of Applied Linguistics and Technology at Iowa State University. He is founding editor of the Journal of Second Language Pronunciation and the founder of the annual Pronunciation in Second Language Learning and Teaching Conference. His research focuses on pronunciation, intelligibility, pronunciation, and accent. John has received university awards for Excellence in Graduate Teaching, for Career Achievement in Research, and was named Angela B. Pavitt Professor of English in 2018.
In our conversation, John talks about:
- accent vs pronunciation
- the nativeness principle vs the intelligibility principle
- how he coined "the intelligibility principle"
- high and low value features of pronunciation
- why some vowel sounds don't matter
- native and non-native teacher effects on learner performance
- learners viewing native speakers as a vaccine for poor pronunciation
- some native teachers believing learners should just follow them
- getting "caught" with accent
For more from John Levis:
Thank you for listening. Your support has been overwhelming and we couldn't do what we do without you. We hope this podcast serves as an effective CPD tool for you.
If you have a comment or question about today's show, we'd love to hear from you: [email protected]
Ways we can help you right now:
1. Book a free 1:1 chat with us to strategize your teaching business.
2. 5in30: Get 5 clients in the next 30 days
3. Just starting your business? Get free guidance in our support group.
100 episodes
Manage episode 468942300 series 2926997
Book a complimentary meeting with us to help grow your business.
Learners can think a native teacher is a vaccine against poor pronunciation. Equally, native teachers can be misinformed in thinking that students should just follow them.
We dive into pronunciation, intelligibility, and teacher effects on learner performance with the great John Levis.
John is Professor of Applied Linguistics and Technology at Iowa State University. He is founding editor of the Journal of Second Language Pronunciation and the founder of the annual Pronunciation in Second Language Learning and Teaching Conference. His research focuses on pronunciation, intelligibility, pronunciation, and accent. John has received university awards for Excellence in Graduate Teaching, for Career Achievement in Research, and was named Angela B. Pavitt Professor of English in 2018.
In our conversation, John talks about:
- accent vs pronunciation
- the nativeness principle vs the intelligibility principle
- how he coined "the intelligibility principle"
- high and low value features of pronunciation
- why some vowel sounds don't matter
- native and non-native teacher effects on learner performance
- learners viewing native speakers as a vaccine for poor pronunciation
- some native teachers believing learners should just follow them
- getting "caught" with accent
For more from John Levis:
Thank you for listening. Your support has been overwhelming and we couldn't do what we do without you. We hope this podcast serves as an effective CPD tool for you.
If you have a comment or question about today's show, we'd love to hear from you: [email protected]
Ways we can help you right now:
1. Book a free 1:1 chat with us to strategize your teaching business.
2. 5in30: Get 5 clients in the next 30 days
3. Just starting your business? Get free guidance in our support group.
100 episodes
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