Showing posts with label audio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label audio. Show all posts

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Introducing Haptic-integrated pronunciation work

Clip art:
Clker
Clip art:
Clker
Here's an interesting note on a website that develops haptic technology:

 "As with any UI element, haptics must be designed thoughtfully in order to achieve the desired experience. Users expect the sight, sound and feel of their experience to be consistent, rational and integrated. The combination of haptics with audio and visual UI can be breathtakingly effective if all these components work together, but can be confusing if poorly designed. To help guide the developer through the process, we’ve created a series of design recommendations for the most commonly implemented gestures."(Italics, mine.)

Those four terms in italics, "consistent, rational, integrated--and breathtakingly effective" provide a good set of criteria for assessing haptic pronunciation work--especially the latter! The second, rational, is worth more discussion. Providing a simple, direct, verbal explanation for learners as to why they should be excited about EHIEP is a challenge. Leading off with a warm up and demonstration where students join in, on the other hand, almost invariably convinces them that it is "designed thoughtfully" and worth engaging with. To quote my favorite athletic shoe logo: Just do it!

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Excellent audio-aural-only pronunciation learning? Really?

Yes. Have been meaning to do this post for some time now. Perhaps the best known of the audio-media based programs is the Pimsleur Method, which is basically audio recordings that learners hear, repeat after and respond to. (There is more involved, of course, but the essential learning mechanism is straight, non-visual, (non-haptic!) engagement.)

So, given what this blog is about, how could that be possible? Simple. There are some learners for whom that is perfect, and, as in the Pimsleur approach, it (oral/aural competence) can be done exceedingly well, scaffolding in material and delivered in voices that--for many reasons--seem to "stick" in the brain of the learner. Pimsleur, like Asher (TPR), was first focused on the mechanisms of memory: optimal content, timing and voice delivery parameters.

What is of particular interest in HICP is the latter, the impact of the felt sense of the voice, both the learner's and the instructor's in anchoring in memory. One of my favorite models in that regard has always been that in the book, My voice will go with you, a compilation of the therapeutic/teaching stories of the great hypnotherapist, Milton Erickson. As in any memorable song, speech, sermon, comment or conversation, a great voice with perfect timing can deliver a message that you (almost) never forget. Just takes a little more lesson planning . . . Hear what I'm saying?