I like listening to different accents. There are plenty of different accents around Greater Manchester.
When I teach phonics I have to make myself say the letter sound 'u' as the middle sound in 'good'.
Those accents of Gtr Mcr vary quite wildly too as you know Katherine,
Mancunian & Salford accents/speech being much faster & harder edged than those of outer GM suburbs like Wigan, Oldham or say Cheadle for example.
I would also say that North Manchester & Salford accents are 'rougher' than those in the South.
Factor in the 'class' & urban demographics of towns/villages very close to each other with huge variants in speech/accent like the ones I am passing through now, Chorlton *very diverse* through Didsbury/Fallowfield both a 'c0ck stride' from Moss Side, & onto Heaton Moor *posh* via adjoined Burnage *rough arsed home of the Gallagher brothers* then Stockport.
Here enters what I call the 'Uni' effect, where a good number of graduates settle from other regions in affluent areas of Manchester yet border some of the harshest poverty stricken environments of GM.
So far on this journey I think I have detected around a dozen variants on the Manchester/Greater Manchester accent, from the slightly slow drawl of Bolton through the very slow & lazy drawl of Farnworth through sharp Salfordian Swinton & encountering the plummy RP of affluent Didsbury & Heaton Moor.
I must also say Katherine that I have been extremely impressed with modern teaching techniques & standards, especially phonics & literature/writing.
At the age of 4 & one of the youngest in her reception year, juniors comprehension of language both written & spoken is far more advanced than I could ever have envisaged at such a tender age.
I am not sure when 'real' or joined up writing began to be taught from the outset but I see the advantage of not relearning as I did from 'print' to joined writing.
Glad to see the back of the cane & the slipper that I became accustomed to in the 70's too.