Teaching pronunciation through the use of web tools and applications as a motivational agent to improve the oral competence of 7th graders in a public school in Armenia Quindío

Currently, globalization plays a fundamental basis in the economic, political and social development of a country. That is how, the interest of establishing English as a lingua franca has become a fundamental pillar for the governments around the world. In this sense, the Colombian Ministry of Educa...

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Autores:
Matiz Buitrago, Pablo Enrique
Gómez Castrillón, Cristian
Gutiérrez López, Luisa Fernanda
Tipo de recurso:
Trabajo de grado de pregrado
Fecha de publicación:
2020
Institución:
Universidad del Quindío
Repositorio:
Repositorio Universidad del Quindío
Idioma:
OAI Identifier:
oai:bdigital.uniquindio.edu.co:001/6302
Acceso en línea:
https://bdigital.uniquindio.edu.co/handle/001/6302
Palabra clave:
Rights
openAccess
License
Derechos reservados Universidad del Quindío
Description
Summary:Currently, globalization plays a fundamental basis in the economic, political and social development of a country. That is how, the interest of establishing English as a lingua franca has become a fundamental pillar for the governments around the world. In this sense, the Colombian Ministry of Education, in its Bilingual Program created in 2004, started the dream of developing biculturality to be able to face the new challenge of breaking the barriers of communication among speakers of different cultures. In fact, the relevance of speaking English as a second language requires the development of the communicative competences which are reading, writing, listening and speaking. When talking about the last one, pronunciation plays an important role because if it is not well approached, students can feel insecure of speaking without knowing how to pronounce a word correctly. As a result, their motivation to produce orally is negatively affected. According to Folse and Ivone (2005) (as cited in Fernandez 2008, p. 5) “some students are good at speaking in a natural way and tend to participate in all conversation exercises, while others can be quiet and reserved”. It means there is still a notable difference between the input the students receive and the output the students produce. In other words, many students are able to understand the English language, but they are still unable to speak it in the local context.