Phonetics and Phonology I
Phonetics and Phonology I
Phonetics and Phonology I
CURSO
SIGLA
CREDITOS
MODULOS
REQUISITOS
CARACTER
DISCIPLINA
PROFESOR
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Description
Theoretical practical course dedicated to the study of the theoretical aspects of English phonetics and
phonology. It corresponds to an in-depth segmental description of the standard varieties of English. This Couse
also explores the status and characteristics of English as a lingua franca and the application of phonetics to other
areas of knowledge. The course entails phonemic transcription practice, oral production, and sound
discrimination of the standard varieties of English.
Objectives
General:
Apply phonetic theory to the description, classification, and production of oral English with special emphasis
on the phonological processes that underlie the GB and GA varieties.
Specific:
Apply the principles of phonetics to the description and classification of the sounds of English.
Sound discrimination.
Reproduce the segmental and prosodic features of English.
Produce spoken English in the chosen variety with a near native proficiency.
Understand the segmental variations of the different dialects of English.
Analyse the relevance and contributions of phonetics to the different areas of knowledge.
Compare and contrast the segmental inventories of Spanish and English.
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CONTENIDOS
Linguistic sciences: Linguistics and Phonetics; scope and means. Language and speech. Levels of
linguistic analysis.
Phonetics: the areas of Phonetics. Scope of Phonetic Sciences: science of speech, speech pathologies,
speech synthesis. Speech Chain: speaker, medium, and listener. How thee relate to oral communication
2.1. Speech mechanisms: phonation organs and their specific role in the production of English segments.
Segmental features of English: manner and place of articulation.
2.2. Speech transmission: acoustic phonetics. Acoustic details of English segments. Perception theories.
Interlanguage and foreign language acquisition.
2.3. The speech act in English: segmental, prosodic, and paralinguistic features.
English segments inventory:
3.1. English vocoids: parameters of classification. Vowels and consonants: inventory and frequency of
occurrence. Weak forms. Allophonic variations. Pure vowels and diphthongs of GB and GA.
3.1.1. English pure vowels in detail: front, central, and back vowels; open, mid, and close vowels.
The phonology of English vowels. The impact of phonological environment on English
vowels.
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Methodology
This course has a high practical component. Nevertheless, the theoretical and practical aspects of the course
are in direct relationship which translates into a methodology that contemplates:
Expository lectures with a high level of teacher-student interaction.
Weekly lab sessions.
Transcription exercises of both written and spoken texts.
Phonetic and phonological evaluations and exercises.
Specific readings and discussion of these.
Elaboration of a guided final written work of topics pertaining to the discipline.
Discussion of recent phonetic theory, especially those of applied nature.
evaluation
- 2 written tests
- 2 oral presentations
- 1 research paper
- 1 oral control
- Transcriptions and quizzes
- 1 final oral exam
BIBLIOGRAFIA
Ashby, M., & Maidment, J. A. (2005). Introducing phonetic science. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Bauman-Wngler, J. A. (2009). Introduction to phonetics and phonology: From concepts to transcription.
Boston: Pearson.
Brown, A. (2014). Pronunciation and phonetics: A practical guide for English language teachers.