Speaking
skill
Introduction
Speaking
is the productive skill in the oral mode. It, like the other skills, is more
complicated than it seems at first and involves more than just pronouncing
words.
Listening
Situations
There are three kinds of speaking situations
in which we find ourselves:
·
interactive,
·
partially interactive, and
·
non-interactive
Interactive
speaking situations include face-to-face conversations and telephone calls, in
which we are alternately listening and speaking, and in which we have a chance
to ask for clarification, repetition, or slower speech from our conversation
partner. Some speaking situations are partially interactive, such as when
giving a speech to a live audience, where the convention is that the audience
does not interrupt the speech. The speaker nevertheless can see the audience
and judge from the expressions on their faces and body language whether or not
he or she is being understood.
Some
few speaking situations may be totally non-interactive, such as when recording
a speech for a radio broadcast .
Micro-skills
Here
are some of the micro-skills involved in speaking. The speaker has to:
·
pronounce the distinctive sounds of a language clearly
enough so that people can distinguish them. This includes making tonal
distinctions.
·
use stress and rhythmic patterns, and intonation
patterns of the language clearly enough so that people can understand what is
said.
·
use the correct forms of words. This may mean, for
example, changes in the tense, case, or gender.
·
put words together in correct word order.
·
use vocabulary appropriately.
·
use the register or language variety that is
appropriate to the situation and the relationship to the conversation partner.
·
make clear to the listener the main sentence
constituents, such as subject, verb, object, by whatever means the language
uses.
·
make the main ideas stand out from supporting ideas or
information.
·
make the discourse hang together so that people can
follow what you are saying
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