TTh 2:00-3:50 BHB 222
Jeff Conn connjc@pdx.edu 503-725-4099 East Hall 241
Office Hours: Wed 10:00-11:00 & by appointment webpage: http://web.pdx.edu/~connjc/
The primary goals of this course are to provide you with an understanding of the articulatory dimension of speech production and to teach you phonetic transcription. You will learn the mechanisms involved in segmental and suprasegmental speech production. These mechanisms include respiration, phonation, resonation, and articulation. You will be introduced to the topics of acoustic phonetics and human speech perception. You will learn the phonology of speech sounds in American English. In addition, you will learn to phonetically transcribe normal and disordered speech using the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). The primary emphasis will be on English sounds and their transcription, although description and transcription of sounds in other languages will also be included. We will also spend a fair amount of time learning how to analyze speech sounds acoustically, that is, by means of measuring such speech features as amplitude and frequency. At the end of the course students should be able to interpret spectrograms and other acoustic displays.
Goals
By the end of winter term, students will demonstrate knowledge in the following areas:
By the end of this term, you will demonstrate knowledge and understanding of these topics material through performance on three exams, three homework assignments, one lab assignment, and various in-class projects. These four methods of evaluation will be combined to determine your final grade.
Grading Scale:
93 -100 A 73 - 76.99 C
90 - 92.99 A- 70 - 72.99 C-
87 - 89.99 B+ 67 - 69.99 D+
83 - 86.99 B 63 - 66.99 D
80 - 82.99 B- 60 - 62.99 D-
77 - 79.99 C+ 59.99 and below F
Ladefoged, Peter. 2006. A Course in
Phonetics (5th ed.).
Accompanying website: http://phonetics.ucla.edu/
then click on A Course in Phonetics
Johnson, Keith. 2003. Acoustic and
Articulatory Phonetics (2nd ed).
Ladefoged, Peter. 2005. Vowels and
Consonants: An Introduction to the Sounds of Languages (2nd ed).
Ladefoged, Peter, and Ian Maddieson. 1996. The
Sounds of the Worlds Languages.
Final grades are determined on the following basis:
Undergrads |
|
5% |
Class participation |
25% |
Quizzes |
25% |
Homework |
25% |
Final exam |
20% |
Acoustics Project |
Class participation. The mark for class participation depends first of all on regular attendance (please remember to sign the attendance sheet). More importantly it depends on being prepared and actively contributing to class discussion. There will also be in-class, small-group practice with listening and producing sounds. Students are strongly encouraged to work together on all aspects of the course.
· Class attendance Preparation Active involvement
Homework. Homework exercises will come from the book and other sources. These exercises are turned in, discussed in class, but not graded for correctness. You get credit for just doing them, but neglecting to turn them in will hurt your grade. Each homework is worth 10 points. Any homework turned in late will receive only 6 points. There are 11 possible homeworks due, but the total possible is for 10 (can do 1 for 5 points extra credit or skip one). The exercises in the book are available on the CD and on the website so you should not have to rip the pages from your book to turn them in. The computer labs should be equipped with some IPA font or another in Microsoft Word, but you can download them for free at:
http://www.sil.org/computing/fonts/Lang/silfonts.html
Or here: http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/wells/fonts.htm
Quizzes. Quizzes are the graded version of the homework. Students not present for the quizzes will receive a 0. Excused absences can be arranged around quizzes PRIOR to the quiz date. Quizzes include such tasks as the following:
Transcription from a written text Transcription of oral stimuli Short answer
Acoustics project.
You will all be given samples of speech and will have to perform various
acoustic analyses on the data. More
information regarding this assignment will be distributed in class. You will need to download a free speech analysis
program Praat at: www.praat.org you can
save it on your PSU H drive and run the program from there.
Final exam. The exam covers all of the course material and is fairly objective in its nature. It includes performance as well as listening (transcribing) components.
· Course content: Objective true-false, multiple choice, and short-answer questions
· Acoustic analysis: Interpret acoustic displays such as spectrograms and be prepared to make inferences as to the significance of the displays
· Perception: Transcription from oral stimuli provided by instructor
· Production: Students will be expected to produce a set of sounds chosen at random from sounds of the worlds languages
Additional
Course Information:
Students with
Disabilities. If you are a student with a documented
disability and registered with the
Transcription CDs. We have developed a transcription CD so that
you can practice transcription on your own.
The CD is not required; however, if you would like a copy, please bring
$2 and a blank CD and we will make a copy for you. We will also give you a copy of the answer
key. Remember: your transcription skills are only as strong
as the amount of time you put into practicing them.
TTh 2:00-3:50 BHB 222
Jeff Conn connjc@pdx.edu 503-725-4099 East Hall 241
Office Hours: Wed 10:00-11:00 & by appointment webpage: http://web.pdx.edu/~connjc/
Week |
Tuesday |
Thursday |
1 |
Bureaucratic preliminaries Begin Ch 1 |
|
2 |
3 (T 15 Jan) Ch 1 Ch 2
Transcription {HW1 due = Ch 1 Ex A-C, pp. 24-26} |
4 (TH 17 Jan) Ch 2 - Transcription {HW2 due = Ch 1 Ex D, E, G, I, J, pp. 27-32} |
3 |
5 (T 22 Jan) Ch 2
-Transcription Ch 3 - English
Consonants {HW 3 due = Ch 2 Ex A-C, E (only identify diffs), I pp. 48-50} |
6 (TH 24 Jan) Ch 3 - English Consonants {HW4 due = Ch 3 Ex A
& D (problems with this ex will discuss), pp. 76-80} [Quiz 1 chaps. 1 & 2] |
4 |
7 (T 29 Jan) Ch 3
-English Cons Ch 4 English
Vowels |
8 (TH 31 Jan) Ch 4
-English vowels {HW5 due = Ch 4 Ex C-F, H, pp. 101-103} [Quiz 2 chap. 3 Eng Cons] |
5 |
9 (T 5 Feb) Ch 4 - English vowels |
10 (TH 7 Feb) Ch 5 - English Words and Sentences (No need to know ToBI) {HW6 due = Ch 5 Ex B, D, E, F, pp. 128-130} |
6 |
11 (T 12 Feb) Finish
Ch 5 Ch 6 - Airstream Mechanisms and Phonation Types [Quiz 3 chaps. 4
& 5] |
12 (TH 14 Feb) Ch 6 - Airstream Mechanisms and Phonation Types {HW7 due = Ch 6 Ex C-E, pp. 153-155} |
7 |
13 (T 19 Feb) Ch 7
Consonantal Gestures [Quiz 4 chap. 6] |
14 (TH 21 Feb) Ch 7 Consonantal Gestures Ch 8 Acoustic
Phonetics {HW8 due = Ch 7 Ex A-D, pp. 177-178} |
8 |
15 (T 26 Feb) Ch 8 Acoustic Phonetics [Quiz 5 chap. 7] |
16 (TH 28 Feb) Ch 8
Acoustic Phonetics Ch 9 Vowels etc {HW9 due = Ch 8 Ex A-C, pp. 208-209} |
9 |
17 (T 4 Mar) Ch 9 Vowels and Vowel-like Articulations {HW10 = Ch 9 Ex A,
p. 231} |
18 (TH 6 Mar) Ch 10 Syllables and Suprasegmental Features [Quiz 6 chap. 8-9] |
10 |
18 (T 11 Mar) Ch 10 Syllables and Suprasegmental
Features Ch 11 {HW11 due = Ch 10 Ex A, F-G, pp. 254-256} |
19 (TH 13 Mar) Review Ch 11 Acoustics Project
due |
|
Final Exam: Monday, March 17, 10:15-12:05 |