Teaching The Schwa
Teaching The Schwa
Teaching The Schwa
If you only learn or teach one phoneme, make sure it's the most
common English sound - the schwa.
The schwa
Conclusion
The same thing happens with individual words. While stressed syllables
maintain the full vowel sound, unstressed syllables are weakened. For example,
the letters in bold in the following words can all be pronounced with a schwa
(depending on the speaker's accent): support, banana, button, excellent,
experiment, colour, sister, picture.
Fast dictation
I find this activity useful for introducing the schwa in context. However, it can be repeated
several times with the same group of students, as it also recycles grammar and vocabulary.
Warn students that you are going to dictate at normal speaking speed, and that you will not
repeat anything. Tell them to write what they hear, even if it's only one word. Then read out
some sentences or questions including language recently studied in class.
For example, I used these questions with Pre-Intermediate level students, following revision of
present simple questions:
After reading the sentences, allow students to compare in pairs or groups. Then read again,
while students make changes and additions, before a final comparison with their partner(s).
Next, invite individual learners to write the sentences on the board, while others offer
corrections. The teacher can correct any final mistakes that other learners do not notice.
Say the first sentence again naturally, and ask learners which words are stressed. Repeat the
sentence, trying to keep stress and intonation consistent, until learners are able to correctly
identify the stressed syllables. Then point to the schwa on the phonemic chart and make a
schwa sound. Get students to repeat. Read the first sentence again and ask learners to identify
the schwa sounds. Repeat the sentence naturally until students are able to do this. Ask them to
identify the stress and schwas in the other sentences, working in pairs or groups. My students
found the following, although again there is some variation between accents.
N.B. I normally get learners to write the schwa symbol underneath the
alphabetic script.
Once this is done, you can drill the sentences, perhaps by 'backchaining'. This
is where the sentence is drilled starting from the end, gradually adding more
words.
After doing this activity for the first time, I ask learners some awareness-
raising questions:
A gentle reminder
You may still find, even when drilling, that learners are tempted to pronounce
the full vowel sound in unstressed syllables. I give my students a gentle
reminder that schwa is the 'Friday afternoon' sound. Slumping in the chair and
looking exhausted while saying schwa normally gets a laugh!
Conclusion
Many of my students have seemed fascinated by the insight that English is not
spoken as they thought, with every vowel being given its full sound, and after
an initial introduction to the schwa they start to look for it themselves in other
words and sentences. More ambitious students take every opportunity to
practise this 'native-speaker' feature, while others revert to the full vowel
sound after drilling, but in either case their expectations of how English sounds
will have changed.
Further reading
Sound Foundations by Adrian Underhill
Pronunciation by Dalton and Seidlholfer
How to Teach Pronunciation by Gerald Kelly
Teaching English Pronunciation by Joanne Kenworthy
Catherine Morley, British Council, Mexico