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Pronunciation
If a learner can't understand others speaking English nor be understood when speaking, communication will break down. Working on pronunciation in class can help learners with this key to communication. The activities in this section focus on problems learners may have with individual sounds. Watch this section for more activities that work on other features of pronunciation.

It Was the Way She Said It
A way to practice intonation, stress, and rhythm.

Pronunciation Information Handout
A helpful packet of information about pronunciation.

How Many Words?

In English we tend to stress key words and reduce other words. This can cause problems for students. They may have trouble hearing when one word finishes and the next begins, or don’t hear unstressed syllables or contractions. Think about the sentence “I’d like a glass of water, please.” Or “He should have gone to the doctor.” How would you say them using natural speech? This activity will help students recognize this feature of pronunciation.

Consonant Recall
This activity can help learners hear differences between sounds and then to recognize words that begin with different letters.

Past Tense Stand Up
Learners listen for and then practice the different sounds -ed makes in regular verbs in the past tense.

Clap the Stress
Using a clapping pattern can help learners hear correct stress in multi-syllable words.

Minimal Pairs
Minimal pairs are two words that differ by only one sound (chip/ship). Working with them can help learners hear the difference between two sounds with which they are having difficulty.

Tongue Twisters
Tongue twisters offer a fun way for learners to work on difficult sounds.


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