Saturday, December 16, 2023

"Ward off" (at least some) miscommunication in your English conversation teaching

For anybody serious about pronunciation teaching, Nigel Ward's excellent 2019 book, Prosodic patterns of English conversation, is a must. (Full disclosure: I just "rediscovered" the book myself last year,  having incorporated aspects of Ward's work for years but had not connected much to his overall framework!) I'm doing a workshop on February 24th at the BCTEAL Regional Conference using Ward's work, "Nine "touching" conversational pronunciation patterns your students should not be without! 

The book gets a little technical in places but the pedagogical applications are very clear and immediately applicable. Here are some examples of the "patterns." The first six are from Ward; the other four are relatively "standard" intonation patterns taught by most methods in some form. The haptic application of Ward's prosodic patterns includes accompanying gesture and touch, hence the "touching" term in the workshop title. 

  • Bookends - "That's really very interesting.  (Two stressed words with a valley in the middle.)
    •               \         -------          \
  • Down step - "Dinner's ready!" (Drop down of a minor third)
    •                  -----    ___
  • "Creaky voice - "I'm out of here. (Voice falls to near F1 of voice, with "creaky" effect)
    •                                  \\
  • Strong clip - "Stop it!" (Strong stress with "clipped" second word)
    •               --- |
  • Late rise - "I love that TEAM!" (Final rise-fall showing enthusiasm or energy)
    •                              / /
  • "I'm good." - "I'm good." (Quick step up with clipped stressed word; conversation ending) 
    •                _--|
  • Fall (2 types)
    • I'm coming back next week. (Fall with slight release at the end.)
      •                              \.
    • I'm coming back next week if I have time to. (Fall mid-sentence w/o release)
      •                              \                      \.
  • Fall-rise - "Are you serious?" (Pattern suggesting skepticism in this case.)
    •                          \ /
  • Rise - "Are you serious?" ( A "simple" question, generally expecting yes/no response.)
    •                      /

What makes Ward's approach somewhat unique is that the context for using "prosodic conversational patterns" is, of course, in conversation, not taught in isolation. Haptic uses that as a point of departure and embodies the patterns as well. Join us at the University of Victoria in February, or check back for the recording in early April!



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