The purpose of this study is to determine the relationship between students’ cultural sensitivity and changes in their pronunciation while abroad. The relationship between L2 pronunciation in Spanish and cultural sensitivity is explored in the study-abroad context. A significant correlation is discovered between the students’ score on the Inventory of Cross-cultural Sensitivity and improvements in the accuracy of their pronunciation as judged by a panel of native Spanish speakers. This study provides empirical evidence that cultural factors enhance language learning. Implications for teaching include the need to incorporate cultural education as a basic component of the language classroom.
Hansen Edwards, Jette, Ka Long Roy Chan, Toni Lam & Qian Wang
2021. Social Factors and the Teaching of Pronunciation: What the Research Tells Us. RELC Journal 52:1 ► pp. 35 ff.
Casillas, Joseph V.
2020. The Longitudinal Development of Fine‐Phonetic Detail: Stop Production in a Domestic Immersion Program. Language Learning 70:3 ► pp. 768 ff.
Nagle, Charles L., Alfonso Morales-Front, Colleen Moorman & Cristina Sanz
2016. Disentangling Research on Study Abroad and Pronunciation. In Handbook of Research on Study Abroad Programs and Outbound Mobility [Advances in Higher Education and Professional Development, ], ► pp. 673 ff.
Baker‐Smemoe, Wendy, Dan P. Dewey, Jennifer Bown & Rob A. Martinsen
2014. Variables Affecting L2 Gains During Study Abroad. Foreign Language Annals 47:3 ► pp. 464 ff.
Kissling, Elizabeth M.
2014. What Predicts the Effectiveness of Foreign-Language Pronunciation Instruction? Investigating the Role of Perception and Other Individual Differences. The Canadian Modern Language Review 70:4 ► pp. 532 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 30 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.