Ernie Adnan Scholarship and Financing Division, Ministry of Education, Aras 2, No. 2, Menara 2, Jalan P5/6,
Presint 5, Putrajaya, Malaysia and 2Faculty of Languages & Linguistics, University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Malaysia
Ernie Adnan is a lecturer at the Institute of Teacher Education in Perlis, Malaysia and is currently pursuing her PhD at the Faculty of Languages and Linguistics, University of Malaya. She began her career as an English teacher in a secondary school in 1999 and has been a teacher educator at the Institute of Teacher Education since 2010. Ernie won the most innovative poster at the Free Linguistics Conference 2018. She also emerged as first runner-up at the National Three-minute Thesis Competition in 2018.
Faculty of Languages & Linguistics, University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Malaysia
I am a Professor at the Department of English Language, Faculty of Languages and Linguistics, University of Malaya (UM). My main areas of research interest are the segmental and prosodic features of spoken Malaysian English but I have also worked on the sound system of other languages like Malacca Portuguese. I am currently working on language revitalisation projects for Malacca Portuguese. I was Dean of the Faculty from 2015-2018. I have published papers in journals like Studies in Second Language Acquisition, World Englishes, English Today, Asian Englishes and Journal of the International Phonetic Association (in press).
Poh Shin Chiew Faculty of Languages & Linguistics, University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Malaysia
Dr Poh Shin Chiew is a senior lecturer at the Department of Malaysian Languages and Applied Linguistics, Faculty of Languages and Linguistics, University of Malaya (UM) in Malaysia. Her main areas of research interest are phonetics and phonology (especially suprasegmental features), Chinese varieties, teaching and learning Chinese as a second language.
The level of awareness and production of English lexical stress among English language teacher trainees in Malaysia
Ernie Adnan, Stefanie Pillai, Poh Shin Chiew
Abstract
The realisation of lexical stress among Malaysian speakers of English is likely to be different from other varieties of English. In spite of this, there is a preference for a native pronunciation model in the teaching of English in Malaysia. In relation to this issue, this paper focuses on lexical stress among a group of Teaching of English as a Second Language teacher trainees. The objectives of this paper are to assess the overall level of awareness of lexical stress among them, to examine their production of lexical stress, and to determine the link between their level of awareness and production. The method used to elicit data for the first objective was a Lexical Stress Awareness Test (LSAT), completed by 104 teacher trainees. Data for the second objective were obtained by recording the trainees reading sentences containing test words. The findings from the LSAT indicate that most of the trainees have an intermediate level of awareness of English lexical stress. They were generally unable to describe the characteristics of a stressed syllable. In addition, the findings from the acoustic analysis of the recordings suggest that they did not have a systematic pattern of stressing syllables with the main correlate of stress being vowel lengthening. In contrast, most of them chose ‘higher pitch’ as the characteristic of a stressed syllable. Hence, there is an inconsistency between their awareness and production of lexical stress in English. We discuss the implications of these findings in relation to the teaching of pronunciation in the classroom and the effect of lexical stress placement on intelligibility. Our general conclusion is that more attention needs to be given in teacher education to how lexical stress is used in English, and also to the characteristics of stress in the Malaysian variety of English.
Keywords
Acoustic correlates of stress; English pronunciation; lexical stress; teacher trainees