This document discusses prosody, which refers to elements of speech like rhythm, pitch, stress, and intonation. It explains that prosody is important for understanding meaning and emotion. The document provides examples of how prosody impacts communication and lists activities to help people practice and improve their prosody skills.
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Prosodie
This document discusses prosody, which refers to elements of speech like rhythm, pitch, stress, and intonation. It explains that prosody is important for understanding meaning and emotion. The document provides examples of how prosody impacts communication and lists activities to help people practice and improve their prosody skills.
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Handy Handouts ®
Free informational handouts for educators, parents, and students
The Importance of Prosody
by Rynette R. Kjesbo, M.S., CCC-SLP
What is prosody? • Pitch – the degree of highness or
lowness in a person’s voice. Men Erica ordered a hamburger… is that a sentence usually have a low pitch while women or a question? Are you sure? What if you knew and children tend to have higher- that Erica was a vegetarian and you weren’t sure pitched voices. if you heard correctly that she had ordered a hamburger? Wouldn’t you ask in disbelief, “Erica • Intonation – the rise and fall in pitch ordered a hamburger?” In this example, words that occurs when we are speaking. We are not enough to figure out the meaning. We often use a rising pitch when we ask a need something more. We need prosody. Prosody yes/no question. refers to the set of variables in speech that affect how a message is communicated and understood. Does Prosody Really Matter? Prosody includes: Yes! Not only does prosody help us differentiate • Rhythm – the flow of connected questions from sentences (as in the example in the speech that comes from the first paragraph), but it also helps us to recognize a combination of stressed words, speaker’s emotional state (through his/her “tone” unstressed words, and pauses in of voice), clarify communication (e.g., “I asked for a phrase or sentence. A steady, the time – not a dime”), understand sarcasm… and unvarying rhythm makes speech sound the list goes on! Prosody (like language) is usually unnatural and robotic. acquired naturally as children grow and listen to prosody being modeled around them. However • Loudness – the amount of volume some individuals such as those with Childhood used when speaking. Whispering Apraxia of Speech, Autism, cochlear implants, requires very little volume while Alzheimer’s, and Parkinson’s may need assistance shouting requires considerably more in learning to use prosody appropriately. volume. • Stress – the force or emphasis used on a sound, syllable, or word in comparison to other sounds, syllables, or words. A stressed syllable in a word has more emphasis than other syllables in the word. • Speed – the pace of speech, or how fast or slow we speak. A fast rate of speech can have a negative effect on a listener’s ability to understand the message we are trying to communicate.
Free informational handouts for educators, parents, and students
(cont.)
What Can I Do? • “What Does It Mean?” – Think of
a simple sentence such as: “I didn’t Here are some activities you can use to work on take your pencil.” Have your child prosody: think about and describe how the • Read or Tell Stories – Using character meaning changes when different voices gives you an opportunity to words in the sentence are stressed. For example, try lower pitches, higher pitches, if I said “I didn’t take your pencil,” that suggests louder voices, and softer voices. For that someone else did. If I said “I didn’t take example, in Goldilocks and the Three your pencil,” that implies that I did something Bears, use a low, loud voice for Papa Bear and a else to your pencil. If I said “I didn’t take your high, soft voice for Baby Bear. pencil,” that indicates that I took someone else’s • Sing Songs or Tell Rhymes – Music pencil. And if I said “I didn’t take your pencil,” and rhymes are great ways to work that hints that I took something else that on rhythm. In addition, if you sing a belonged to you. song that repeats itself (such as The Song That Never Ends or Be Kind to Your Web-footed Friends) you can practice loudness, speed, and pitch by singing the verses softer, louder, slower, faster, higher, or lower. • Play a Game of “Copycat” – Have your child imitate phrases or sentences that you say or read from a newspaper (or other type of written material). Say or read the phrases/sentences using different intonation and stress patterns. • Ask and Answer “WH” Questions – Say a simple sentence such as: “Jimmy washed his dog.” Then ask simple “WH” questions that can be answered by repeating the sentence while stressing different words in the sentence. For example, “Who washed his dog?” “Jimmy washed his dog.” “What did Jimmy do to his dog?” “Jimmy washed his dog.” “What did Jimmy wash?” “Jimmy washed his dog.”
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