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May 10, Renmin U. English Vowels in Taiwanese college EFL Learners. Raung-fu Chung Southern Taiwan University rfchung@mail.stut.edu.tw. Outline of the talk. Introduction English as a second or a foreign language? Vowels and vowel acquisition Related theories: MDH and SLM Cases
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May 10, Renmin U English Vowels in Taiwanese college EFL Learners Raung-fu Chung Southern Taiwan University rfchung@mail.stut.edu.tw
Outline of the talk • Introduction • English as a second or a foreign language? • Vowels and vowel acquisition • Related theories: MDH and SLM • Cases • Concluding remarks
1. Introduction • English as a second or a foreign language in Taiwan? • English, as a matter of fact, as a third or a fourth language in Taiwan (i) L1 = native language = Southern Min (ii) L2 = lingua franca = Mandarin Chinese (iii) L3 = foreign language = English
Findings: Let us examine the elementary school students in the beginning.
Summary: • [i] is more like that of Mandarin • [a] is higher, much like that of Mandarin • [u] is between Mandarin and Southern Min, also showin the impact of Mandarin • [e] is exactly a reduplicate of the Mandarin [e] • [o] is higher, quite different from the [o]s in Mandarin and Southern Min
2. College students • Subject: 30 college students & 3 native speakers • Age of college students: they are 19-20 years old, and they are sophomores • Age of native speakers: they are 27, 28 and 36 years old respectively
Summary: • [i]: much like that of Mandarin, while it is different from those of English, SM • [u]: much like that of Mandarin, somewhat different from those of English, and SM • [a]: also like that of Mandarin
Mid vowels: [e] and [o] The mid vowels [e] and [o] are quite intriguing in that they are distributed in a far apart space for each language. However, college learner’s [e] and [o] are also more like those of Mandarin. This is not surprising for English and Mandarin share the same backness assimilation constraint, while SM does not allow vowels with the same backness:
This is not surprising for English and Mandarin share the same backness assimilation constraint, while SM does not allow vowels with the same backness:
Concluding remarks: • Both studies, based on English vowels of elementary and college EFL learners, indicate that Taiwanese learn or acquire English on the basis of Mandarin, although SM is indeed their first language. • The results further confirm the role of backness constraints.
Implications • Theoretical implication CAH (Contrastive Analysis Hypothesis) SLM (Speech Learning Model) MDH (Markedness Differential Hypothesis)
Pedagogical Implications • Positive transfer: • Sound identification and drill practice • How far can Communicative go?
Remaining issues: 1. Vowel category correspondence
Thank you for your attention Comments are welcome!