英文摘要 |
This study investigates the teaching and learning of Mandarin Chinese tones, with a specific focus on pedagogical aspects related to the third tone (T3), which are developed from different theoretical assumptions concerning the default form of T3. The traditional teaching method asserts that the full-T3 (with a dipping contour, [214]) is the standard form, while the innovative approach posits the half-T3 (with a low falling contour, [21]) as the standard. Since no experimental study has examined the impact of these two teaching methods, a training study was conducted to compare their effectiveness and determine which one might be more beneficial for L2 learners. Thirty-two non-tonal speakers participated in this study and a two-stage production test (comprising an immediate posttest and a delayed posttest) was employed to assess the participants’T3 performance. The findings indicate that the Half-T3 First (HT3F) teaching method generally enhances the tone production skill of L2 learners across most tone combinations. However, in the case of the T3-T3 combination, a significant decrease in pre-T3 accuracy and subpar performance in phrase-final T3 were observed. This unexpected outcome was attributed to the general principle of faithfulness within the framework of Optimality Theory, suggesting that the HT3F may encounter constraint violations. |