1 / 37

THE IMPACT OF LINGUISTIC AND CULTURAL DIVERSITY ON SPEECH SOUND PRODUCTION

THE IMPACT OF LINGUISTIC AND CULTURAL DIVERSITY ON SPEECH SOUND PRODUCTION. Some information taken from:.

ckowalski
Download Presentation

THE IMPACT OF LINGUISTIC AND CULTURAL DIVERSITY ON SPEECH SOUND PRODUCTION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE IMPACT OF LINGUISTIC AND CULTURAL DIVERSITY ON SPEECH SOUND PRODUCTION

  2. Some information taken from: • Roseberry-McKibbin, C. (2018).Multicultural students with special language needs: Practical strategies for assessment and intervention (5th ed.). Oceanside, CA: Academic Communication Associates.

  3. I. INTRODUCTION** • Demographics: persons from multicultural backgrounds are increasing greatly in the U.S.

  4. Recent Statistics--% of U.S. population:** 197020002050 White 83.7 70 50 Black 10.6 12 13 Hispanic 4.5 13 24 Asian 1.0 4 9 Native Am. .4 .9 1

  5. Pew Research Center** • By 2055, the U.S. will not have a single racial or ethnic majority. Much of this change has been (and will be) driven by immigration. Nearly 59 million immigrants have arrived in the U.S. in the past 50 years, mostly from Latin America and Asia. Today, a near-record 14% of the country’s population is foreign born compared with just 5% in 1965. Over the next five decades, the majority of U.S. population growth is projected to be linked to new Asian and Hispanic immigration. 

  6. II. LANGUAGE VARIETIES** • Dialects—mutually intelligible forms of a language associated with a particular region, ethnicity, or social class. • In U.S., business dialect is General American English (also called Mainstream American English and Standard American English)

  7. You will have a good L2 accent if:

  8. Children all over the globe exhibit phonological processes:

  9. III. NATIVE AMERICAN LANGUAGES** • Test: only what is in lecture • NA languages spoken mainly by elders, not children • Many NA languages have glottal stops

  10. youtube • Gloria Modern Family—Baby Jesus Sneak Peek

  11. IV. SPANISH-SPEAKING CHILDREN • A. Background—Roseberry-McKibbin (2018)

  12. B. Phonological Characteristics (test p. 231 chart esp.)

  13. Stoel-Gammon & Dunn, 2017:

  14. Test question • . A Spanish-speaking girl, Arisbel, has been referred to you for a speech-language screening. When conducting the screening, you know that it would be typical for a Spanish-speaking child to say: • A. chin/shin • B. yoke/joke • C. derry/very • D. A, B • E. A, B, C

  15. C. Assessment and Treatment • --make sure interpreter speaks same dialect! • --get a conversational sample • --only treat for disorders, not differences

  16. V. AFRICAN AMERICAN ENGLISH • A. History of AAE • Heavily influenced by langs of West Africa • Some speakers codeswitch between AAE and MAE

  17. B. 5 Factors Influencing Use of AAE** • 1. Age (younger children use it more) • 2. Socioeconomic status (low-SES families use it more than middle- and upper-SES) • 3. Geographic location (more in the south) • 4. Education (less in highly educated families) • 5. Gender (more boys than girls)

  18. C. Phonological Characteristics of AAE • **Note: for exam, main focus is on chart on p. 216 • Metathesis (æks/æsk) • Final consonant deletion • Consonant cluster reduction • d/ð very common

  19. D. Assessment and Treatment

  20. In the public schools…

  21. In private practices and universities….

  22. VI. ASIAN, PACIFIC ISLANDER, AND ARABIC LANGUAGES • A. Introduction—Roseberry-McKibbin, 2018:

  23. Migration Information Resource:

  24. B. Languages of Asian Countries (from bottom of p. 239 to middle of p. 246—lecture notes only are on exam—not the reading) **chart on p. 240 is on the exam. • 1. Arabic: Middle East and North Africa.

  25. 2. Japanese

  26. 3. Tagalog

  27. 4. Khmer (kəmaɪ)

  28. 5. Hmong

  29. 6. Vietnamese

  30. 7. Chinese

  31. Youtube video • The four tones of Mandarin (we’ll watch the 1st 2.5 minutes) • Four Tones-Learn Chinese Mandarin speak-Learning Chinese.mp4

More Related