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After six years of low scores for students learning English, Texas educators say it’s the test’s fault
(www.texastribune.org)
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According to my own experience as a fluent English speaker who has a strong accent, modern voice-recognition systems have no problem with my accent, but I agree that they have flaws. They're not perfect, but I expect that they're more accurate than teachers because teachers have motives other than accuracy.
My wife and her family have a hell of a time getting Google to understand their requests (Hispanic, wife is first generation) and has no issue understanding my requests, so I could see significant issues with the software misinterpreting.
Huh. My wife's Filipino accent is pretty heavy and Google almost always understands her.
Interesting. A few people have told me that I enunciate more clearly than a native speaker, so if that's the case then my experience with speech-recognition systems will not be representative. With that said, older speech recognition systems did have trouble understanding me whereas newer ones don't so I think there really has been improvement.
I tried to find data about how students fluent in English do on this test but I wasn't able to. Comparing native English speakers to native Spanish speakers who have already learned English would be informative.