This study investigates the efficacy of structured pedagogical methodologies in mitigating negative phonological transfer from first language (L1) dialect environments to second language (L2) pronunciation acquisition. The research addresses a significant gap in second language acquisition literature by examining how dialect-influenced L1 systems create unique challenges for L2 phonological development that differ from standard language transfer patterns. Through a comprehensive literature review and theoretical analysis, this investigation explores the complex interplay between dialectal variation, phonological transfer mechanisms, and instructional effectiveness in L2 pronunciation pedagogy. The study synthesizes empirical evidence from multiple research domains, including Speech Learning Model applications, meta-analytic findings on pronunciation instruction effectiveness, and observational studies of classroom practices. Key findings reveal that learners from dialect-rich environments exhibit distinct error patterns that require specialized pedagogical interventions incorporating contrastive minimal-pair drills, prosodic shadowing, and explicit articulatory feedback. The research demonstrates that traditional pronunciation instruction approaches, which assume uniform L1 phonological systems, are inadequate for addressing the complex transfer patterns emerging from dialectal variation.
Qinxue Li (Thu,) studied this question.