Article published In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages
Vol. 34:1 (2019) ► pp.83–125
Trinidadian secondary school students’ attitudes toward accents of Standard English
Published online: 22 March 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.00029.mee
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.00029.mee
Abstract
In the anglophone Caribbean, tendencies of endonormative reorientation have been observed in the development of
local standards of English. Situated in the school context, this study adds a language attitude perspective on the question of
whether and to what extent an endonormative standard of English is emerging in the island of Trinidad. In an accent rating study,
803 secondary students were asked to evaluate the accents of Trinidadian, other anglophone Caribbean, American, and British
teachers and to identify their countries of origin. The results indicate that the respondents’ norm orientation is
multidimensional and includes exo- and endonormative influences: first, there is a general coexistence of different standards
since no standard serves as a superordinate norm. Second, there is no clear-cut distinction between exo- and endonormative
accents, but fine-grained differences in the ratings: British and American voices received slightly higher ratings than local
ones, but an American-influenced Trinidadian voice was also highly appreciated. These findings provide some new perspectives for
evolutionary models of World Englishes and new insights for the discussion of standards in Trinidad, the wider anglophone
Caribbean, and other small postcolonial speech communities where different local and global norms interact.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.The sociolinguistic situation
- 2.1English in Trinidad
- 2.2The role of Standard English in classrooms and curricula
- 3.Language attitude research in Trinidad, the wider anglophone Caribbean, and other contexts
- 3.1Attitudes toward creoles in Trinidad and the wider anglophone Caribbean
- 3.2Attitudes toward Standard English(es) in Trinidad and the wider anglophone Caribbean
- 4.Research method
- 4.1Design of the research instrument
- 4.2Data collection
- 4.3Participants and schools
- 4.4Data analysis
- 5.Accent variation in the teacher voices
- 5.1Trinidadian English pronunciation features
- 5.2Descriptions of the accents in the survey
- 6.Results
- 6.1Overall evaluation of differences across teacher voices and items
- 6.2Principal component analysis
- 6.3Analysis of components extracted
- 6.4Accent recognition
- 7.Discussion
- 8.Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
References
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