Robin Walker reflects on accent, ELT, intelligibility, and four decades of teaching and writing about pronunciation.
In this episode of the PronSIG Podcast, host Mike Budden speaks with Robin Walker, a teacher, writer and pronunciation specialist with decades of experience teaching English in Spain and training teachers across Europe. Robin is co-author, alongside Gemma Archer, of Teaching English Pronunciation for a Global World, published by Oxford University Press, and served for many years as editor of Speak Out, the journal of PronSIG.
Robin reflects on his journey into pronunciation teaching, from arriving in Spain with a chemistry degree to becoming a key voice in the field of English as a Lingua Franca. The conversation explores what Jennifer Jenkins' Lingua Franca Core means in practice for classroom teachers, and why the assumption that native speaker accents are automatically intelligible deserves to be challenged.
They also discuss the critical distinction between accent and intelligibility, drawing on the research of Tracy Derwing and Murray Monroe, the surprising connection between pronunciation knowledge and reading comprehension via the phonological loop, and what teachers should prioritise when working with learners in international contexts.
Robin also shares reflections on his years as editor of Speak Out, including the making of the landmark 50th issue, the psychological damage that school language learning can leave on adult learners' self-esteem, and his thoughts on what human teachers offer that artificial intelligence cannot replicate.