SESSION 4 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6 3:00-4:30pm Spoken English: From Film to Oracy http://www.phil.muni.cz/plonedata/wkaa/Dokumenty/konference/Brno2015/Brno2015.jpg •SZENTGYÖRGYI, SZILÁRD •University of Pannonia, Hungary •szentsz@almos.uni-pannon.hu •How do Movie Characters’ Accents Reflect • Linguistic Stereotypes and Prejudices? • •TOMKOVÁ, KATEŘINA •Masaryk University, Faculty of Arts, Brno, Czech Republic •2060@mail.muni.cz, tomkat@phil.muni.cz •A Chapter from Academic Oracy: Oral Presentations in English Academic Oracy: Oral Presentations in English • https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR8wgxbI_EpWZ_UlrN7uUvM_MtFg161ZaOLfJwhyyVUIXr JU0f2 Academic Oracy: Oral Presentations in English • •THE CONTENT AND PURPOSE OF ACADEMIC ORACY •PREREQUISITES TO ACADEMIC ORACY •SITUATIONS PRACTISED IN ACADEMIC ORACY •PITFALLS AT VARIOUS STAGES OF MAKING • A PRESENTATION •OBSERVATIONS MADE AT THIS CONFERENCE •THE DEEPEST TRAP OF ALL •QUESTIONS – YOURS AND MINE • • • • • • THE CONTENT AND PURPOSE OF ACADEMIC ORACY •to increase awareness of the diverse forms of spoken English •to present academic papers in class on topics such as Interlingual word tabboos, Academic Slang, Academic Hierarchy and Argumentative Fallacies •to practice speech behavior in typical academic situations & deal with the immediacy (Vachek) of spoken discourse •to create, rehearse and perform a comic skit in English at Creativity Night •to select 2 of the most admired speakers at this department and engage in a fan session PREREQUISITES TO ACADEMIC ORACY •Phonetics & Phonology - suprasegmentals, • social and regional accents •Spoken Fluency - synthesis of skills = confidence • knowledge # skill •Pronunciation Varieties of English • best recordings: The English Language in 24 Accents, A Tour of the British Isles in Accents, Amy Walker‘s tutorials for American English, Lisa Mojsin‘s Accent Reduction videos, Rachel’s English (can x can’t) •Students‘ own role models and observations • Q1 •Students benefit greatly from all the above but this may just be my impression. SITUATIONS PRACTISED IN ACADEMIC ORACY •an oral examination • •a diploma thesis defense • (see Recurrent errors) • •a presentation in class, at conferences • •a debate – academic, impromptu • PITFALLS AT VARIOUS STAGES OF MAKING A PRESENTATION •selection of topic, amount of information conveyed, lexical and other means Q2 •preparation, rehearsing, timing •delivery: - technicalities & anxiety • - rapport with audience, confidence, • posture & body language Q3 • - correspondence between screen and • speech • - voice & pronunciation (see Form.pdf), • loudness & tempo OBSERVATIONS MADE AT THIS CONFERENCE: technicalities • •Jan´s distance from the microphone •missing mic at last night´s reception •uncooperative master computer at this morning´s culture studies session • •Stoicism and flexibility helps. OBSERVATIONS MADE AT THIS CONFERENCE: choice of lexical means •Q2 •J. Vanderziel: arduous journey; I´d like to echo •O. Jelinek: as fate would have it •M. Kaylor: The words Erasure and Vanishment will mark my own departure. •A. Van Herk: Dr. Kaylor, you´re incorrigible. •D. Sparling: Such – excuse the pun – such military overkill… •T. Sherman: to be media-savvy OBSERVATIONS MADE AT THIS CONFERENCE: choice of lexical means by non-native speakers •Non-native speakers I have heard so far lack the audacity to use expresions such as the above, maybe with the exception of Prof. Ventola saying Excuse my French which could be understood as quoting John Major. However, they dispose of expert vocabularies is their fields of research such as were heard in an earlier British Studies session: •to frame •Scroungers •fecklessness OBSERVATIONS MADE AT THIS CONFERENCE: voice & pronunciation •Q2 •+ A. Van Herk´s use of tempo! •- stresses and reductions in analysis, component, event, hypothesis-ses, participants, success •- devoicing in studies of English have always been x bees (beast, beasts) •- a combination of mistakes in a short word such as the tenth being perceived as the dense •- /æ/>/e/: massive, passive, lacking… x laxical •- mispronunciations: cradle, occurrence, their THE DEEPEST TRAP OF ALL • •Losing oneself: fretting over the details so much that one loses a detached view of one´s topic and enjoyment of one´s own presentation. • •Improvements are to be expected with age. THANK YOU FOR YOUR KIND ATTENTION <3 QUESTION TIME… •If you don´t ask, I will! QUESTIONS •Q1: Why doesn´t a student´s speaking performance always reflect their extensive listening experience? •Q2: Is it always an advantage to present in your mother tongue? What are the perks (if any) of being a non-native speaker of E presenting in E? •Q3: Does posture and obvious breaking of rules really matter?