PART ONE: Teaching English to English Learners Flashcards
Intoduction & chapters 1-2 of Diaz-Rico textbook
phonology
study of the sound system of a language
p. 15
phonetics
science of the production, reception, analysis, transcription, and classification of speech sounds, and also relation of speech sounds to the total language process
p. 15
phonemes
individual sounds in a language, distinctive units that “make a difference” when sounds distinguish words
p. 16
digraph
pair of letters used to write one sound or a combination of sounds that does not correspond to the written letters combined, confusing to English learners attempting to separate the digraph into separate phonemes
p. 16
diphthong
vowel blend of two adjacent vowels, each of which is sounded
p. 16
phonemic sequences
permissible ways in which phonemes can be combined in a language
p. 17
point of articulation
tip, front, or back of tongue
p. 18
manner of articulation
the way the airstream is obstructed
p. 18
voiced versus voiceless sounds
determined by whether the vocal cords vibrate or not
p. 18
phonological awareness
the process of separating the oral sound stream into syllables and words
p. 18
phonemic awareness
ability to use the sound-symbol connection to separate sentences into words and words into syllables in order to hear, identify, and manipulate the individual phonemes within spoken words
p. 18
stress
amount of volume a speaker gives to a particular sound. Stress is a property of syllables, and in some languages, stress is predictable.
Teachers are better served by teaching words in context rather than in lists.
p. 18
pitch
phonological component that plays a key role in determining meaning.
p. 19
tone languages
use the pitch of individual syllables to contrast meaning
p. 19
prosody
pitch interacting with word stress to produce the underlying rhythm of the language
Spanish speakers may have difficulty achieving prosody because English words are pronounced with different stress depending on their locations in sentences
smooth prosody is a combination of phrasing and pausing, e.g. “Please/do your chores/before you go out”
p. 19
intonation patterns
use of pitch to modify sentence meaning
English is characterized by accented and unaccented syllables, where tonal languages produce sentences without a rise-and-fall curve
p. 19
contrastive analysis
paying careful attention to phonemic differences between languages
found to be relatively nonproductive as a teaching methodology
p. 20
error analysis
making careful note of a learner’s difficulties to identify need for specific interventions
p. 20
morphology
study of the meaning units in a language
p. 20
morphemes
small word units that cannot be further subdivided
p. 20
free morpheme
stand alone morpheme, i.e. envelope, the, through
p. 20
bound morpheme
occurs only in conjunction with other morphemes, either as affixes or bound roots, i.e. -ing, dis-, -ceive
p. 20
morphemes: best practice
science lesson, teacher uses several roots from a general list (astro, bio, hydr, luna, etc.) asks students to work in pairs to search text for words with these roots. Next students receive a list of prefixes and affixes and pairs generate 5-10 new words including definitions. Students then write word and definition on separate index cards and play memory matching game with the 2 card decks.
p. 21
affixes
prefixes (beginning of word), suffixes (end of word), infixes (inserted between other morphemes, i.e. motherS-in-law)
p. 20
clipping
word formation process of shortening words, i.e. prof for professor
p. 22
word blends
words formed from parts of two words, i.e. travelogue from travel + monologue
p. 22
attention to morphemes
can accelerate language acquisition if students are exposed to families of words across parts of speech, i.e. courage, courageous, encourage or ice, icy, ice cream, ice age
p. 22
comparatives and superlatives: best practice
Speed Search: students pull a slip of paper every two minutes to find someone who fits description on the slip: “thinks dogs are LESS intelligent than cats”, “has MORE than two brothers”, “oldEST child in the family”
p. 23
syntax
rules that govern the formation of phrases and sentences
p. 23