An Activity for Teaching
Intonation Awareness to ESL/EFL Students
What we teachers are
looking for are ways to generate conversation and communication in class-and
hopefully beyond. Getting learners to say something-anything at all-in a
conversation class is great, but it must be built on. One way to achieve this
is by sensitizing students to the conversational tactics they use naturally
when talking in their native tongue: turn-taking, supporting, challenging,
questioning, expanding on statements, and so on. They don't tend to use these
when interacting in English.
While the students in a
conversation class must be exposed to the above conversation strategies they
also must be made aware that the language they use in class owes part of its
impact to aspects teachers do not normally work on: tone, facial expressions
and body language. The words students employ in class often come together in
sentences and the message gets across eventually, with a little help from
teacher. However the message is very often tone-less and emotion-less, but
nobody complains because the students are opening their mouths. In fairness,
this lack of emotion and tone is more prevalent in the lower levels, where
students are still coming to terms with the new language.
As I found that many
verbal exchanges in my classes were a little too polite, perhaps because of the
neutral tone employed by the speakers, I decided to experiment with tone. To
this end, I devised the following, very experimental, conversation idea.
The Intonation Awareness Activity
This
activity could be used as a good ice-breaker or, if developed, could form the
basis of a whole class. It would then combine conversation with a certain
amount of conscious learning.
This activity does not
need a huge amount of preparation and may help students to loosen up while
speaking. The idea also hopes to sensitize students to the concept of tone and
lessen the amount of monotonous, seemingly un-emotional exchanges which occur
between learners. It could inject a bit of life and humor into the class. I
used it as a warm-up.
Working on the
assumption that some expressions or words can have as many as 9 or more
different meaning or connotations depending on how they are said, try the
following activity:
- Say the following in five different ways.
- Goodbye
- Hello
- How are you?
- Do we have to speak English, teacher?
- I never watch TV
- Etc. (Add more expressions liable to spark several
interpretations when delivered with a different tone)
Your
students will be inhibited at first, so the best thing to do is let them know
what you are talking about. That is, give them a sample of how to use different
tones when you want to insinuate different meanings. I did the following after
the class had begun to grasp what I was looking for:
- Me: John, say "Hello" to me
- John: "Hello" (neutral, polite tone)
- Me: John, now say "Hello" to a friend
- John: "Hello" (much more upbeat tone)
- Me: John, say "Hello" to a
6-month-old-baby!!!
- John: "Hello" (contorted face, exaggerated
fall-rise tone, etc)
Needless
to say, there were laughs all round. I think the point was beginning to be made.
These expressions must
be said with different settings and contexts in mind, ie police control;
shopping check-out; a polite meeting; a romantic setting; a separation
(holiday); Monday morning in the office; drunk-talk; condescending; nervous; an
interview; talking to a baby; a funeral; an exam; ironic; a long-lost friend.
Note: Much of the
"extra" meaning will derive also from facial expression and even
body-language.
Examples
When I did "I never
watch TV", I told them to imagine that the sentence was being uttered by a
condescending intellectual to a TV addict! (It's just one example).
When I did "How are
you", I told them to imagine they knew something very personal about the
addressee involved. Or that they had not seen the person in 30 years, and so on.
At the end of the day,
perhaps all you achieve is an enjoyable class without (perhaps) much
interactional content. But at least the students relax a bit more and actually
experiment with the language they are learning to use.
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