jueves, 26 de marzo de 2009

COLOR CHART


The Sound/Colour Chart
The English Sound/Colour Chart, created by the late educator Caleb Gattegno, is a 57 cm. by 42 cm. wall chart with 58 coloured rectangles. Thirty-seven of the rectangles are of one color, representing a single sound in English, and 21 are of two, representing two sounds. The vowels are placed above a line nearly halfway down the chart, and the consonants are placed below this line. The two-colored rectangles are divided horizontally and are read from top to bottom. Thus, the color for the /a/ phoneme is placed above the color for the /y/ phoneme to create a white/light pink rectangle for the diphthong found in “high.” On the consonant side of the chart, the sound made by “qu” in words such as “quite” is made up of a single rectangle whose top half is the color for /k/ and bottom the color for /w/.

The Sound/Colour Chart is part of a larger system, which includes the Fidel and the Word Charts. The Fidel for English is a set of eight wall charts with lists of spellings for each of the rectangles on the Sound/Colour Chart, coloured the same way as the rectangle. The /aı/ rectangle, for example, is represented by a list of 12 spellings, each coloured white on top and light pink on bottom. The 12 Word Charts represent a functional vocabulary of English. The words on these charts are printed in colours corresponding to the other charts, indicating their pronunciation. The word “my,” for example, is printed with an orange “m” and a white/light pink “y.”
The choice of colours in this system is largely arbitrary, but sharply contrasting or very similar colours seem to have been selected to contrast or show similarities between sounds. For example, the colours for /i/, /ı/, and /y/ are, respectively, red, pink, and light pink. The /u/ in “too,” in contrast, is dark green. The system is not entirely consistent, however, probably because of the difficulty in assigning a limited number of commercially reproducible colours to so many sounds to represent such a complex system of relationships. In addition to showing relationships among the sounds, some individual colours seem to have been chosen for other reasons, for example the bright shade of yellow chosen to represent the schwa, perhaps to highlight this important sound so central to English pronunciation (Moyer, 1977).
The Sound/Color Chart is used to engage students in a variety of games to help them work on pronunciation at all levels, from individual sounds to connected speech. These games will be described later in further detail, but a brief summary of the rules or conventions for the games is as follows: 1) when the teacher or a student taps a rectangle with a pointer, the sound(s) for that rectangle is/are uttered by the students; 2) when several rectangles are tapped in succession, the sounds are uttered in that order, usually forming a word or a sentence; 3) a brief pause or lowering of the pointer indicates a break between words or the end of a sentence; 4) stress may be indicated by tapping one rectangle more forcefully than the others; 5) phrasing may be indicated by tapping a series of rectangles very quickly, or once a sentence has been introduced with the chart, the teacher can use her fingers to represent the words in the sentence, placing fingers together where the words link or separating them where there should be a pause. Individual teachers will of course devise their own rules, conventions and gestures to use in addition to these.

HOT N COLD

You change your mindLike a girl changes clothes Yeah, you PMS like a girl I would know
And you overthinkAlways speak cryptically I should knowThat you're no good for me
'Cause you're hot then you're coldYou're yes then you're no You're in and you're outYou're up and you're downIt's rolling its white It's black and it's white We fight, we break upWe kiss, we make up
You, you don't really wanna stay, noYou, but you don't really wanna go, oh
'Cause you're hot then you're coldYou're yes then you're noYou're in and you're out You're up and you're down
We used to be just like twins, so in sync The same energy now's a dead batteryUsed to laugh 'bout nothingNow you're plain boringI should know That you're not gonna change
'Cause you're hot then you're coldYou're yes then you're no You're in and you're outYou're up and you're downIts rolling its whiteIt's black and it's white We fight, we break upWe kiss, we make up
You, you don't really wanna stay, noYou, but you don't really wanna go, oh
You're hot then you're coldYou're yes then you're no You're in and you're out You're up and you're down
Someone call the doctorGot a case of a love bipolar Stuck on a rollercoasterCan't get off this ride
You change your mindLike a girl changes clothes
'Cause you're hot then you're coldYou're yes then you're no You're in and you're outYou're up and you're downIts rolling its whiteIt's black and it's white We fight, we break upWe kiss, we make up
'Cause you're hot then you're coldYou're yes then you're no You're in and you're outYou're up and you're downIts rolling its whiteIt's black and it's whiteWe fight, we break upWe kiss, we make up
You, you don't really wanna stay, noYou, but you don't really wanna go, oh
You're hot then you're coldYou're yes then you're noYou're in and you're out You're up and you're down

SAMMY DIAGRAMS


Imagine yourself at public auditions in which four conductors are competing for the top job in an orchestra. Each competitor has to conduct the same piece of music, and each to the same metronome. As he waves his baton, the first conductor begins with the words, “One, two, three, four.” The second says “One and two and three and four.” The next says “One and a two and a three and a four.” And the last aspirant says “One and then a two and then a three and then a four.”Which of these conductors will miscue the orchestra? The answer is “None.” Each of these four sentences takes exactly the same amount of time to say. This illustrates a key and yet peculiar feature of our language. It is called the stress-timed rhythm of English.Stress-timing: We can illustrate with almost any word of two or more syllables – for example, “syllable.” We stress this word using the pattern Ooo, placing primary emphasis on the first segment of the word. In English every long word has its own stress pattern.

MINIMAL PAIRS








MINIMAL PAIRS

Definitions
minimal pairnoun (plural: minimal pairs)
(linguistics) A pair of words differing by only one phonetic segment or suprasegment, used to prove the validity of a proposed phoneme, toneme, or chroneme.
EXAMPLES:

NIM CHIMPSKY






Nim Chimpsky (November 19, 1973March 10, 2000) was a chimpanzee who was the subject of an extended study of animal language acquisition (codenamed 6.001) at Columbia University, led by Herbert S. Terrace.
The validity of the study is the subject of dispute, as Terrace argued that all ape-language studies, including Project Nim, were based on misinformation—from the chimps. R. Allen and
Beatrix Gardner did a similar study known as Project Washoe, in which the chimpanzee was also raised like a human child. Washoe was given affection and participated in everyday social activity with her adoptive family. Her ability to communicate was far more developed than Nim's. Nim lived 24 hours a day with his human family from birth; Washoe had spent her first 10 months in a research laboratory prior to being moved to a language study. But both chimps could use fragments of American Sign Language to make themselves understood.
Chimpsky was given his name as a
pun on that of Noam Chomsky, the foremost theorist of human language structure and generative grammar at the time, who held that humans alone were "hard wired" to develop language

PRONUNCIATION

Tongue twister is a tool where you can improve you pronunciation and the muscles of you mouth. INSTRUCTION.- Read the following tongue twister as quicly as posible a check the way that you pronounce. read and practice. The thirty-three thieves thought that they thrilled the throne throughout Thursday.

Defintion of Phonetics and Phonolgy

Phonetics vs. phonology
Phonetics deals with the production of speech sounds by humans, often without prior knowledge of the language being spoken. Phonology is about patterns of sounds, especially different patterns of sounds in different languages, or within each language, different patterns of sounds in different positions in words etc. In my opinio, phonetics and phonology are very usefull by students that are going to adquire a new language (English). it is important that you as a student learn the waythatyou pronounce and how you speak.