Linguistic Competence Analysis and the Development of Speaking Instructional Material

Linguistic oral competence plays a vital role in attaining effective communication. Since the English language is considered as universally used language and has a high demand skill needed in the work-place, mastery is the expected output from learners. To achieve this, learners should be given integrated differentiated tasks which help them develop and strengthen the expected skills. This study aimed to develop speaking instructional supplementary material to enhance the English linguistic competence of Grade 9 students in areas of pronunciation, intonation and stress, voice projection, diction and fluency. A descriptive analysis was utilized to analyze the speaking level of performance of the students in order to employ appropriate strategies. There were two sets of respondents: 178 Grade 9 students selected through a stratified sampling and chosen at random. The other set comprised English teachers who evaluated the usefulness of the devised teaching materials. A teacher conducted a speaking test and activities were employed to analyze the speaking needs of students. Observation and recordings were also used to evaluate the students’ performance. The findings revealed that the English pronunciation of the students was slightly unclear at times, but generally fair. There were lapses but generally they rated moderate in intonation and stress, because of other language interference. In terms of voice projection, students have erratic high volume pitch. For diction, the students’ ability to produce comprehensible language is limited, and as to fluency, the choice of vocabulary and use of structure were severely limited. Based on the students’ speaking needs analyses, the supplementary material devised was based on Nunan’s IM model, incorporating context of daily life and global work settings, considering the principle that language is best learned in the actual meaningful situation. To widen the mastery of skill, a rich learning environment, filled with a variety instructional material tends to foster faster acquisition of the requisite skills for sustained learning and development. The role of IM is to encourage information to stick in the learners’ mind, as what is seen is understood more than what is heard. Teachers say they found the IM “very useful.” This implied that English teachers could adopt the materials to improve the speaking skills of students. Further, teachers should provide varied opportunities for students to get involved in real life situations where they could take turns in asking and answering questions and share information related to the activities. This would minimize anxiety among students in the use of the English language.

Authors:



References:
[1] Thornbury, Scott. Beyond the sentence: Introducing discourse analysis. Macmillan Education, 2005.
[2] Nunan, D. 1989a. Designing Tasks for Communication in the classroom. University Press: United Kingdom.
[3] Kinsella, K. (1993). Perceptual learning preferences survey. Oakland, CA: K. Kinsella, San Francisco State University and the Multifunc-tional Resource Center/Northern California.
[4] Goh, C. C. M. (2007). Teaching speaking in the language classroom. Singapore: SEAMEO Regional Language Centre.
[5] Saunders, W. M., & O’Brien. (2006). Oral language. In F. Genesee, K. Lindholm-Leary, W. M. Saunders, & D. Christian (Eds.), Educating English Language Learners: A Synthesis of Research Evidence (pp. 14-45). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
[6] Goh, C. C. M. (2005). Oracy development in literacy-privileged learning environments: Too little, too late? In J. A. Foley (Ed.), New Dimensions in the Teaching of Oral Communication (pp. 92-110). Singapore: SEAMEO Regional Language Centre.
[7] Nunan, D. 1988. Syllabus Design. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
[8] Willis, J., & Willis, D. (1996). Challenge and Change in Language Teaching. Oxford: Heinemann.
[9] K to 12 English Curriculum Guide December 2013 retrieved from www.deped.gov.ph/sites/.../English%20CG%20for%20reuploading_03.04.15.pdf