학술논문

The Effects of International Accents and Shared First Language on Listening Comprehension Tests
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Author
Kang, Okim (ORCID 0000-0002-7721-5283); Thomson, RonMoran, Meghan
Source
TESOL Quarterly: A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect. Mar 2019 53(1):56-81.
Subject
Pronunciation
Listening Comprehension Tests
Language Variation
English (Second Language)
Second Language Learning
Second Language Instruction
Language Tests
International Education
Computer Assisted Testing
Scores
Language Proficiency
Speech Communication
Auditory Perception
Native Speakers
English
Language
English
ISSN
0039-8322
Abstract
This study examines the effect of incorporating a variety of international English accents into a simulated TOEFL listening comprehension test in growing recognition of internationalization of language teaching and learning in the field of TESOL. Although some high-stakes English proficiency exams have begun incorporating speech samples produced by speakers from a range of inner circle English-speaking backgrounds (e.g., Britain, the United States, Australia), the inclusion of samples produced by speakers of outer and expanding circle English varieties (e.g., India, Nigeria, Mexico, South Korea) has been largely avoided. For this study the researchers recruited speakers from six distinct English varieties to produce speech samples for a mock TOEFL iBT listening exam. Listeners who spoke with the same six international English accents were then recruited to take the resulting tests. Results indicate that when accented English is highly comprehensible, listening test scores for stimuli based on high-proficiency speakers of outer and expanding circle varieties of English are not significantly lower than they are in response to stimuli based on inner circle varieties of English. With respect to a shared first language effect on test scores when test materials are spoken in the test taker's own accent, results are complex but inconclusive.