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Teaching English Pronunciation to L1 Speakers of German at Gymnasium (Paperback)
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Teaching English Pronunciation to L1 Speakers of German at Gymnasium (Paperback)
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Seminar paper from the year 2009 in the subject English - Pedagogy,
Didactics, Literature Studies, grade: 2,0, University of Augsburg
(Phil-Hist Fakultat), course: Teaching and Learning English
Pronunciation, language: English, abstract: In the course of the
last three decades a whole new prominence has been granted to the
significance of foreign language (FL) learning. Due to the recent
development of globalization, further emerging of multi-national
enterprises and the coalescence of the European Union, this appears
to be the logical consequence. Because of its nowadays widely
accepted status as a lingua franca (Acar 2006) the learning and
teaching of English as the most frequently spoken second language
has gained importance - in Germany as well as in most
industrialized countries speaking prevalently another first
language (L1). In the recent past, since the end of the 19th
century, changing trends have focused on different methods of
language teaching, such as the ability to translate texts, correct
use of grammar, or wide range of vocabulary. However, the teaching
of English pronunciation finally has come back into the focus of
interest since the second half of the 1980s due to the mentioned
economic and social changes. Nowadays the ability to (net-) work
internationally - and thus reach the "ultimate goal of
communication with other speakers of the second language" (Brown
1994: 226) seems to be one of the highest goals of achievement of
second language (L2) learning. During the time of almost one
century of pronunciation teaching the attitude towards the issue
has changed as well: as Chun (1991: 179) states in her article, the
development started from a segmental and comparative sound
repetition learning strategy, followed by a period of simply
ignoring the topic completely from the 1960s to the early 1980s,
leading finally to the up-to-date approach of teaching
suprasegmentals, sentence intonation as well as other aspects of
connected speech. The most curren
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