Understanding and Teaching English Spelling Concise and engaging, this text provides pre-service and practicing English language teachers with the knowledge they need to successfully teach the spelling of English. Offering context and explanation for the English spell- ing system as well as uniquely addressing specific problems in learning the spelling of English words, this book empowers readers with strategies for coping with these problems. Divided into six accessible sections, Brown covers the history of English spelling, the influence of technology on spell- ing, the role of punctuation, the features of present-day English spelling, teaching strategies for coping with difficult spelling, and the future of spell- ing and literacy. The short, digestible chapters include practical learning objectives and end-of-chapter exercises to help teachers understand and explain English spelling concepts. Adam Brown is Director of Research at Auckland Institute of Studies, New Zealand. ESL & Applied Linguistics Professional Series Eli Hinkel, Series Editor Refective Practice in English Language Teaching Research-Based Principles and Practices Steve Mann, Steve Walsh Teacher Training and Professional Development of Chinese English Language Teachers Changing From Fish to Dragon Faridah Pawan, Wenfang Fan, Pei Miao Research on Refective Practice in TESOL Thomas S.C. Farrell Teaching English to Second Language Learners in Academic Contexts Reading, Writing, Listening, Speaking Jonathan M. Newton, Dana R. Ferris, Christine C.M. Goh, William Grabe, Fredricka L. Stoller, Larry Vandergrift The Politics of English Second Language Writing Assessment in Global Contexts Edited by Todd Ruecker, Deborah Crusan Transnational Writing Education Theory, History, and Practice Edited by Xiaoye You Understanding and Teaching English Spelling A Strategic Guide Adam Brown For more information about this series, please visit: www.routledge.com/ ESL--Applied-Linguistics-Professional-Series/book-series/LEAESLALP? page=2&page=1 Understanding and Teaching English Spelling A Strategic Guide Adam Brown First published 2019 by Routledge 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017 and by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4RN Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business 2019 Taylor & Francis The right of Adam Brown to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record has been requested for this book ISBN: 978-1-138-08266-3 (hbk) ISBN: 978-1-138-08267-0 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-315-11238-1 (ebk) Typeset in Bembo by Swales & Willis Ltd, Exeter, Devon, UK Contents Preface viii SECTION 1 Background 1 1 Introduction 3 2 Types of Spelling System 13 3 Spelling, Writing, and Reading 23 4 History of English 31 5 History of English Spelling 37 SECTION 2 Technology 47 6 A Computer Is Not a Typewriter 49 7 Technology 57 8 Rules of English Spelling 67 SECTION 3 Punctuation 79 9 Punctuation 81 10 Spaces and Hyphens 90 11 Capital Letters 98 vi Contents SECTION 4 Features of Present-day English Spelling 105 12 Silent Letters 107 13 Doubled Consonant Letters 113 14 Spelling of Unstressed Vowels 122 15 Variation 130 16 Loanwords 139 17 Names of Letters 149 18 Spelling Pronunciation 156 19 Pronunciation Spelling 165 20 Homophones and Homographs 169 21 Other Consequences of English Spelling 177 SECTION 5 Strategies for Teaching and Testing English Spelling 183 22 Morphological Strategy 185 23 Etymological Strategy 196 24 Phonological Strategy 203 25 Analogical Strategy 214 26 Visual Strategy 219 27 Teaching English Spelling 226 28 Testing English Spelling 235 SECTION 6 The Future 241 29 Spelling Reform 243 30 English Spelling and Malay Spelling 256 31 The Future of English Spelling 268 32 Conclusion 273 Contents vii Appendix 1: Sound-to-spelling Correspondences for British English 279 Appendix 2: Surnames Exemplifying Spelling Rules 284 Appendix 3: The Main Uses of Punctuation in English 287 Appendix 4: Answers 291 Glossary 311 Index 315 Preface If you can read this, thank a teacher. Anonymous teacher Background This book is a sister volume to my Pronunciation and Phonetics: A Practical Guide for English Language Teachers (Routledge, 2014). However, there are similarities and differences between this book and the previous one. For both books, the intended readership is trainee English language teachers, and in-service teachers. As a result, the emphasis is on what teach- ers need to know in order to teach spelling effectively. Both books contain about 30 short chapters. This breaks the subject up into digestible parts, which is desirable for English spelling, which has many influences and therefore many strategies for teaching. If you read one chap- ter per day, you will finish the book in about a month. However, one difference in this book is that it is perhaps less practi- cal than the previous book. The reason for this is that there exists a huge number of books, websites, etc. with good materials to teach, practice and test English spelling, whereas materials for pronunciation teaching are variable. This book is therefore not entitled Spelling: A Practical Guide for English Language Teachers. Instead, the thrust is for teachers to understand the nature of English spelling, why it is a complex system, and why it is dif- ficult to teach in its present-day form. Nevertheless, every chapter contains exercises, either in the body or at the end, that may be easily adapted for classroom use. Teachers of English may be native speakers or non-native speakers. In terms of pronunciation, this may create a distinction. Native speakers have native pronunciation, without any interference features from the pronun- ciation of other languages. They may be speakers of a nonstandard variety of English pronunciation that may be questionable in terms of its validity as a model for foreign learners. Nevertheless, learners will seldom question the Preface ix pronunciation proficiency of native speaker teachers. Non-native speaker teachers, on the other hand, may have an English pronunciation with clear interference features from their native language. These may be a handicap, especially if the class is multinational. In terms of spelling, however, native speakers are at little advantage over non-native, apart from usually having larger vocabularies. The variation that exists in pronunciation does not exist in spelling, apart from the difference between American and British spelling which, as is argued in Chapter 15, does not amount to a large variation. Nor are native-speaker teachers at an advantage in terms of spelling profi- ciency. There are native-speaker teachers who are good and bad at spelling, just as there are non-native-speaker teachers who are good and bad at spelling. The focus of this book is therefore on making teachers aware of the nature of English spelling. Most teachers, for instance, know little about the history of English; however, this history is still clearly manifested in the present-day spelling of many words. This knowledge is necessary in order to teach spelling effectively. Structure The book is divided into six sections. The first section (Chapters 1 – 5) sets the scene by explaining the nature of spelling systems in languages of the world and describing the history of English spelling. Given that most writing nowadays is carried out on a computer, the internet, or a device (smartphone, tablet, etc.), rather than with pen and paper, Section 2 (Chapters 6 – 8) looks at the influence of this technology on spelling, and the attitude of users to correct spelling, much of which is taken to be whatever the technology states is correct. Section 3 (Chapters 9 – 11) deals with aspects of punctuation. While readers may question whether punctuation belongs in a book on spelling, there are aspects such as hyphens and capital letters that straddle punctuation and spelling. The fourth section (Chapters 12 – 21) represents an investigation into various features of present-day English spelling. Many of these features are vestiges of the long history of English spelling, do not occur in other lan- guages, and may represent barriers to easy learning of the system. Chapters 22 – 26 in Section 5 explain the strategic approach promoted in this book for coping with teaching the difficulties of English spelling. The strategies avoid the common practice of giving learners a list of English words whose spellings are to be learned and tested, without giving any instruction in how to learn the spellings. Pointers as to how to teach and how to test spelling are given in Chapters 27 and 28.