Posts Tagged ‘English as a Second Language’

Micro Businesspersons Allotted $3.1 Million of Business Training, says Premier Christy Clark – L2 Accent Reduction Provides Free Coaching to British Columbians

Monday, March 11th, 2013

Premier Christy Clark has recently announced the allocation of $3.1 million under the ‘Canada Starts Here: The BC Jobs Plan’. These funds are aimed at fueling the training pilot program which will focus on the skills enhancement of British Columbian micro business owners. There are over 1.200 micro businesspersons eligible under the Labor Market Agreement, each of whom will have $1,500 worth of business training that will aid in the progress of their business, and consequently contribute in the long-term advancement of the state. http://www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2012/05/premier-announces-skills-training-for-micro-businesses.htm

L2 Accent Reduction Centre is an excellent training provider for the Micro Business Program as many business owners have a great need to communicate well both in business writing and every day speaking tasks.

L2 Accent Reduction Centre is offering courses with no charge to the business owner; these funds will be covered through the Microbusiness Program. These courses include accent reduction training, which is essential to clear communication, especially when dealing with customer service issues. Similarly, voice projection training and writing courses would greatly improve the oral and written discourse of business for these small-business owners.

Micro Businesspersons Allotted $3.1 Million of Business Training, says Premier Christy Clark   L2 Accent Reduction Provides Free Coaching to British Columbians

Business owners, who would like to take advantage of the world-class oral and written training provided by L2 Accent Reduction Centre, can contact http://www.chamberlearningnetwork.com/. However, the candidates need to comply with all the conditions set by the province for being entitled to free training by L2 Accent Reduction Centre.

English Accent vs Fluency in English Speech

Tuesday, February 19th, 2013

For many new Vancouverites, the local labour market can be a challenge to integrate into. The requirement for “Canadian work experience  is often seen as a veiled attempt at screening newcomers from the pool of applicants.  Assessing language skills is often limited to the writing in a cover letter or the performance at a job interview.

English Accent vs Fluency in English Speech

 

 

Many internationally trained professionals have been in an akward situation where they were misjudged.  One client told us about how he was misjudged at his bank.  When the bank teller could not understand his pronunciation of Trafalgar street, she spoke very slowly and said that she had to call her manager.  She gestured with her finger on an imaginary rotory phone while saying “call the manager”.  This is very frustrating, especially when on paper, the person is fluent in English.

 

When studying at University of British Columbia, Howard, who moved to Canada when he was 16, said accented speech was not a big concern.  ”Sometimes I think it hurt my mark when I had an assignment that involved a presentation.  But usually those kind of assignments were part of group work so I didn’t feel that all the responsibility was on me.”  If anything, Howard noted that some of his professors were hard to understand.  Howard never thought his accent would be viewed differently outside of academia until he started looking for work after graduation.

 

During the job hunt, Howard found that he struggled on the phone.  Face to face interviews didn’t bother him so much. During his time at university, he had done a lot of networking and clubs.  ”I didn’t feel shy”, he said, “I’m an outgoing person.”  The biggest problem was the initial phone call.  ”I don’t want my accent to be my first impression.”  When Howard got a call to arrange a time for an interview, phone conversation was difficult and he felt it set a bad atmosphere for the rest of the job vetting process.

 

With accent reduction training, Howard learned that some of the sounds he made were influenced by his background of learning English in Hong Kong and Australia.  ”I didn’t know that 15 and 50 sounded the same to other people when I said that.”  When you confirm your interview time is 2:15, you want to make sure that they don’t hear 2:50.

 

Howard isn’t alone.  University enrollments by students like him are steadily increasing.  Many Ivy league universities tout their demographic diversity, however the reality of the job market is not as accommodating.  Kurt Hill, former executive director of the Career Management Centre at Simon Fraser University sees value in accent reduction training.  ”Graduates tend to enter the workforce with all of the qualifications, education, and ambition, but those with strong foreign accents often hit a huge roadblock during their very first phone interview.  They may have a great vocabulary, but many employers have had a hard time seeing beyond the accent.” says Hill.

 

Some universities have taken these concerns on by providing workshops for students that can improve their ability to get jobs.  MIT, for example, in order to combat the stereotype that its students are nerdy, provides Charm School.  In Charm School students can learn business etiquette related to how to dress, how to dine, how to give negative information, and more.  Our ability to give a good first impression means identifying our own weaknesses in social settings.  After that, it is just a matter of practicing so that our weaknesses no longer stand out.  Practice makes perfect.

L2 Accent Reduction Speaks at Columbia College

Thursday, November 8th, 2012

On Monday, October 22, 2012, Jeff Madigan from the L2 Accent Reduction Center gave a presentation to the students at Columbia College.  Columbia College is certified post secondary institution catering to international students that offers bridge programs to UBC and other universities.  For students who studied English as a Second Language, accented speech can be a barrier after completing their studies and hitting the North American labour Market.  SFU advisor, Kirk Hill states, “Graduates tend to enter the workforce with all of the qualifications, education, and ambition, but those with foreign accents often hit a huge roadblock during their very first phone interview.”  Columbia College instructor, Fatin Jallad agrees.  He notes that depending on where an international student is from, he can struggle more to understand their speech.  What he notices is something everyone experiences.  Depending on a person’s familiarity with the sound of specific language families, a person’s accent can be either easier or harder to distinguish in terms of speech intelligibility.

L2 Accent Reduction Speaks at Columbia College

Leaders of the Columbia College Entrepreneur Club, Baiaman Urmatbek and Akbuken Shektibay, met up with L2 Accent Reduction at a workshop given at SFU.  They invited Jeff Madigan to speak at their club, not just about voice training, but about how he became an entrepreneur.  ”It’s good for our club to get speakers like Jeff, our club is one of the biggest at Columbia College, says Shektibay.  L2 Accent hopes that they have inspired the students at Columbia College and given them some strategies to help them in their future after graduating.

BC Businesses Diversify Staff and Look to Supportive Training from L2 Accent Reduction Centre

Monday, November 5th, 2012

Is your pizza being delivered by an agriculture engineer from Dubai?

We have all heard the familiar story of how highly-skilled, internationally-trained professionals are wasting time in low-wage survival jobs. Does this happen because of inadequate language skills? Is it an inability to culturally integrate? Were immigrants misled by a promise that their skills were in demand?

BC Businesses Diversify Staff and Look to Supportive Training from L2 Accent Reduction Centre

Each story is unique and there are successes as much as failures but the good news is that British Columbia has a strong diverse workforce and its companies are leading the way in finding ways to harness the power and benefits that diversity brings. On Nov.1, 2012, BCHRMA’s Diversity Roundtable will host an expert panel discussion that will address communication skills and employee engagement for diverse workplaces.

Raj Sharma, HR Manager for BC Hydro will relate his experiences with training and development for internationally trained professionals. BC Hydro has been recognized as a leader in diversity initiatives for its staff, a process it started over 15 years ago after realizing how dominated its workforce had become by locally born male engineers, who were accustomed to assignments in isolated projects over the vast uninhabited areas of British Columbia. Today, many of BC Hydro’s operations have centralized and its workforce has changed too.

ACL Services is also well known for having been a leader in creating diversity policies for its staff. Victoria Darnbrough explains how diversity polices in the workplace can give all workers a fair and equal chance and can define clear boundaries for any workplace conflict that may arise due to cultural difference.

Jeff Madigan, Director of Programs at L2 Accent Reduction Center, works with many large corporations and will discuss how a person’s communication skills can become a barrier and how to address accented speech without offending but by empowering. “Because pronunciation is not a focus in a majority of language learning programs, many workers welcome the idea of becoming better communicators to express themselves without regret or hesitation.”, says Madigan.

Communication skills improvement is a growing area for training and development, and it’s not just for the immigrant worker. Conflict resolution, public speaking, presentation skills, and negotiation are all areas where employees and companies receive benefits from training. However, for the immigrant worker, communication skills can pose as a larger obstacle, since it is often wrongly associated as having to do with language fluency.

L2 Accent Reduction Center provides workplace speech training solutions to address unintelligible accented speech and other related communication skills obstacles that can provide barriers to internationally trained professionals in their place of work.

Master Your Voice in High School for a Stronger Future in British Columbia (BC)

Monday, October 29th, 2012

On September 4, 2012 over 500,000 high school students returned to the classroom. According to the BCTF (British Columbia Teachers’ Federation) nearly 50% of those students do not speak English as a first language. Many of these students come from cultures that place a high value on education and these parents and pupils have only one thing in mind – bring home the A’s at all costs. In a recent article,Vancouver Sun journalist Janet Steffenhangen, brought to light the, “growing number of immigrant students who fail high-school English classes but get the credits they need to attend university by taking inferior courses at little-known independent schools where everyone passes.”

Master Your Voice in High School for a Stronger Future in British Columbia (BC)

According to Jeff Madigan, an Accent Reduction Specialist at L2 Accent Reduction problems with English language fluency can cast a shadow throughout someone’s entire career when left unattended. “In my line of work, I have seen clients such as Kai, who attended university for four years in BC and is barely intelligible . He now works in the Silicon Valley, but struggles in his daily interactions and takes accent reduction lessons online so people can understand him.” says Madigan.

The L2 Accent Reduction Centre provides training on the nuances of English and intelligibility issues connected to accented speech. Training is predominately given to internationally trained professionals who may be fluent in their understanding of English, but never made aware of the subtleties of English when they learned it in their home country. “And we are starting to see more high school students take our training” says Madigan, “even though the skills we teach won’t necessarily help a high-school student to get an A, they will help a student to communicate better so that they can negotiate, present, and lead others; skills that often lead to higher grades and better job opportunities.”

There are some parents who do understand this situation and see the value of investing in their children’s future success. Ivy is currently a high school student who is preparing for her university interviews in the USA. Her father, a Chinese businessman, believes that his daughter’s ability to adopt the same rhythm and speech patterns as a native speaker can be a great advantage to her communication skills and future job success.

Still, a majority of new immigrant parents from Asia are more focused on the letter grade. Madigan feels it is almost a kind of Jacques Demers effect. By finding ways around literacy issues, there is a short term success, like getting into university. But the problem never truly goes away. What good are high marks if you can’t communicate well enough in a job interview to get hired?