Kopečková, Romana; Li, Zeyu; Gut, Ulrike
Forschungsartikel (Zeitschrift) | Peer reviewedA number offactors such as age of onset of learning, motivation and type of instruction have been shown to influence the phonological development of foreign language learners1(cf. e.g., Nagle 2022). More recently, some studies have suggested that language attitudes and meta-phonological awareness might also play a role in the development of foreign language pronun-ciation by classroom learners (cf. e.g., Sardegna/Lee/Kusey2018; Saito 2019). However, no investigations have yet been carried out that directly relate these two factors to the learners’ pronunciation of specific sounds of the target language.This study investigates the relationship between both the learners’ attitudes and metaphonolog-ical awareness with the development of their pronunciation skills during the first year of learn-ing a new foreign language. We investigated 21 adolescents (aged 12–13) with L1 German and L2 English, who had just begun to learn Polish as their L3. Three types of data were collected at the very beginning and the end of the school year: a) questionnaire data on the learners’ attitudes towards learning Polish, learninglanguages and their pronunciation; b) a score of the learners’ metaphonological awareness measured with a Polish accent-mimicry task, and c) au-ditory analyses of their pronunciation of Polish /r/ and vowel reduction in a delayed repetition task. The results of mixed effects logistic regression modelling show that some of the learners’ attitudes predict their accuracy of pronouncing Polish /r/ and unreduced vowels. Moreover, the learners’ pronunciation of unreduced vowels, but not /r/ in Polish improved significantly over the school year and higher metaphonological awareness predicted higher accuracy of unreduced vowels in Polish. The results are discussed from both a theoretical and pedagogical perspective.
Gut, Ulrike | Professur für Englische Sprachwissenschaft (Prof. Gut) |
Kopeckova, Romana | Professur für Englische Sprachwissenschaft (Prof. Gut) |