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Lloyd-Zannini, Lou – Understanding Our Gifted, 2008
Conversations with Josh, a mentee of the author, and other gifted students caused the author to realize that in many cases, what is presented as appropriately differentiated language arts curriculum for gifted/talented students is nothing more than general education curriculum with additional work at the same level as the regular curriculum. If…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Language Arts, Talent, Brain
Ivers, Patrick – Computers, Reading and Language Arts, 1984
Illustrates some of the problems and the advantages of three programs designed for language arts instruction: "English Volume I" (MECC), "English SAT 1" (Microlab), and "Vocabulary Prompter" (Jagdstaffel). (AEA)
Descriptors: Computer Software, Evaluation, Evaluation Criteria, Grammar
Kelly, Robert – Australian Journal of Reading, 1981
Defends the place of grammar instruction in the language arts curriculum by distinguishing it from prescriptive and orthographic conventions. (HTH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, English Curriculum, Grammar, Language Arts
Ediger, Marlow – 1991
A modified language arts curriculum has resulted from the contributions of linguists. Language arts teachers need to be thoroughly versed in content and methodology recommendations made by linguists. It is important for pupils to understand patterns of sentences in the English language. Pupils should also attach meaning to the concept of expanding…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Grammar, Language Arts, Language Usage

Frye, B. E. – Classical Outlook, 1979
Summarizes results of studies showing that students studying Latin perform significantly better in language arts than equivalent groups of students not given instruction in Latin. (NCR)
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Curriculum, English, Grammar

Birch, Barbara – Language Arts, 2001
Attempts to bring some clarity to an understanding of the common attitudes that this culture holds about language and grammar standards. Notes that understanding language attitudes can help language arts teachers know where they themselves stand and how they can address negative or harmful attitudes in the educational setting. (SG)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Grammar

Walker, Laurence – English Quarterly, 1985
Shows that traditional grammar teaching grew out of nineteenth-century beliefs about language learning and the nature of knowledge that are profoundly different from those that direct the language arts curriculum today. Bases the account on approved textbooks, Alberta Department of Education reports, public examinations, and anecdotal records. (EL)
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, English Instruction, Grammar, Language Arts

Redfern, Richard K. – English Journal, 2001
Presents a (fictional) conversation between a college English professor and a graduate student in English who is something of a purist about the language. Shows, in conversations across a semester and a half, her changing attitudes about the rules of good English, "purity" in the language, divided usage, and confusing grammar and usage. (SR)
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, English Instruction, Grammar, Higher Education

Nilsen, Alleen Pace – English Journal, 2001
Discusses the logic, elegance, and history of using they, them, and their as singular indefinite pronouns. Notes that, as a solution to the pronoun problem, the strength of this solution is its vagueness. Offers numerous real-life examples from publications or broadcasts and lists why it is counterproductive for English teachers to exclude this…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction, Grammar, Higher Education
Ediger, Marlow – 1994
Grammar can have meaning and be of use to the learner depending upon the methods of instruction that are being used. The eight traditional parts of speech (noun, verb, adjective, adverbs, prepositional phrase, conjunction, pronouns, and interjection) can be made useful for learners by giving concrete, semi-concrete, and abstract examples when…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, English, Grammar, Language Arts

Thompson, Michael Clay – Journal of Secondary Gifted Education, 2002
This article argues that direct instruction of grammar and vocabulary must be restored to their necessary place in language arts programs for gifted children, who need educated vocabularies and grammar competence of exceptional quality. It discusses strategies for instructing vocabulary and the benefits of learning grammar. (Contains references.)…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Educational Strategies, Gifted, Grammar

Vavra, Ed – English Journal, 1987
Argues that problems in teaching grammar stem from failure to help students develop, as opposed to memorize, grammatical concepts. Recommends discussion of style and vocabulary, student stylistic analysis of their own writing, and deciphering syntactic use, not just definition, of parts of speech. Suggests that such training should begin in…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Grammar, Language Arts, Sentence Structure

Downing, John; And Others – Language Arts, 1980
Five educational leaders--John Downing, Richard E. Hodges, Charlton Laird, Pose Lamb, and Roy C. O'Donnell--offer reflections on significant developments in research on language development during the 1970s and on their hopes for language research and instruction in the 1980s. (GT)
Descriptors: Child Language, Elementary Education, Futures (of Society), Grammar

Donovan, Jeanne M. – English Journal, 1990
Surveys 40 middle-school language-arts teachers in 3 local public school districts. Finds that (1) most teachers believed it was important for their students to master grammar; and (2) teachers spend considerable time teaching grammar. Argues that grammar deserves a prominent place in the middle school curriculum. (RS)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Research, Grammar, Junior High Schools

Meyer, Jim; And Others – English Journal, 1990
Argues that grammar instruction can be more effective if put in a realistic context by: (1) becoming part of an integrated curriculum; and (2) concentrating on the proofreading stage of writing assignments. Illustrates integrating various components of the language-arts curriculum by briefly describing a unit using a short story. (RS)
Descriptors: Grammar, Integrated Activities, Interdisciplinary Approach, Junior High Schools