Chapter 6
L2 intonation perception in learners of Spanish
While the field of L2 variation, particularly with L2 Spanish, is expanding, to date little is
known about the acquisition of variable intonation that occurs in final boundary tones of yes-no questions. The
present study investigates the effects of explicit instruction on the accurate identification of utterance type
(yes-no questions, broad-focused declarative statements, and wh-questions). Eleven L1 English learners of Spanish in
an advanced university level Spanish class listened to 21 Spanish utterances to identify the utterance type before and
after receiving explicit in-class instruction. Two L1 Spanish listeners served as a control. Learner gains in
identification of utterance type were not significant, and there was no statistically significant effect of explicit
instruction on the identification of the utterances.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Background
- 3.Theoretical background
- 4.Methodology
- 4.1Participants
- 4.2Instruments
- 4.2.1Pretest
- 4.2.2Dialect and utterance identification task
- 4.2.3Input during explicit instruction
- 4.2.4Posttest
- 5.Analysis
- 6.Results
- 7.Discussion
- 8.Implications, limitations, and future directions
- 9.Conclusions
-
References