
Before moving to live and teach abroad in Korea, I had a career in producing and shooting some of MTV’s top-rated teen reality shows, such My Super Sweet 16, True Life, Engaged and Underage, Camp’d Out. What did this teach me about teaching ESL?
Directing a good soundbite (aka Pronunciation)
Did I just hear someone utter pibe vs. five?
Repeat.
My students may not be TV talent, but clarity and good enunciation is still important for an audience’s ear.
If I don’t correct their speech habits, their pibes will grow to sebens, then to elebens… until their ” pishes swim in a riber”.
ESL students aren’t the only ones afflicted with bad pronunciation habits, though. It plagues English-speakers too. I remember sitting in many Super Sweet 16ers‘ bedrooms with camera on tripod and lav mic on the talent, directing interviews and promotional reads. Sometimes, a ‘regional accent’ or ‘southern drawl’ gets in the way, making a kid sound like they’re talking with food in their mouth. Other times, it can be a speedy delivery, as if the kid’s words are exhaled into one long and slurred, run-on sentence. There were times some of my show kids were really incomprehensible…
I gave the one favorite word that I use today–




