Week 7
Week 7
Week 7
III. OVERVIEW
This lesson will let the students to be acquainted with the different tips to improve
speaking skill and pronunciation. They will be guided on how to overcome their fears
and doubts. It could also enlighten the students how it makes speaking meaningful and
purposeful.
7. Fluency
The main goal is fluency. Remember that one don’t have to know many complex
grammatical structures to achieve that goal! First of all try to speak as fluent as possible
(even making some grammar mistakes). Then, after making one’s speaking fluent, one
can focus on grammar aspects.
Micro-skills:
Here are some of the micro-skills involved in speaking.
The speaker has to Pronounce the distinctive sounds of a language clearly
enough so that people can distinguish them. This includes making tonal
distinctions.
Use the correct forms of words. This may mean, for example, changes in the
tense, case, or gender.
Put words together in correct word order.
PRONUNCIATION
Proper pronunciation, requires use of the right sounds when vocalizing a word
and stressing the right syllable. It requires knowing the proper way of saying a word in
the region where it is used and accepted by the majority of native speakers.
Proper articulation involves the correct use of sounds for each letter or grouping
of letters. The challenge arises when common rules are ignored due to local custom,
slang or uneducated pronunciation.
First, let’s look at correct pronunciation and its application to giving a good
speech and eloquent public speaking.
Names
It starts with saying names properly. If you are going to use names, make sure
they are pronounced correctly.
Sorry to ruin your wonderful sarcasm, but the joke is on you. You see, the
pronunciation of ax was common till the 1600’s in old English.
So who is wrong? What is the correct way of saying words given any
circumstance? Before answering that, let’s look at the price of failure. What
ignorance could cost you when it comes to saying it right?
Can you see the affect misuse of the way we say words can have on us? Among
the many negative impacts it has are included…
It can make for light hearted conversation. But it can also cause heated disputes
over what is correct.
Some common examples are mother vs moth-ah and father vs fath-ah. Ironically,
those same regional native speakers will take names that end with ‘ah’ like Isaiah
and substitute er making Isa-er. Regionally this may happen in the North East
US, predominantly in New England.
V. ACTIVITY GUIDE
1. What are your fears in actual public speaking? How will you overcome your
fears & doubts?
2. If I’ll let you have your public speaking, what is your topic and why?
Note:
Comment down your answer immediately after answering the module.
VI. REFERENCES
https://www.speechmastery.com/pronunciation.html