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Showing 1 to 15 of 23 results Save | Export
Anderson, Mike – Educational Leadership, 2020
What if, despite good intentions, the words you are using to involve students in discussion are actually shutting them out? Education consultant Mike Anderson presents three common errors that teachers use in posing questions and making comments and offers a few simple shifts that can make all the difference.
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Learner Engagement, Teaching Methods, Student Participation
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David Beglar – Vocabulary Learning and Instruction, 2021
Four papers by Brandon Kramer, Tohru Matsuo, Aaron Sponseller, Young Ae Kim, Suzuka Nishiyama, and Stuart McLean; Stuart Benson and Naheen Madarbakus-Ring; Michael McGuire and Jennifer Larson-Hall; and Atsushi Mizumoto, Geoffrey Pinchbeck, and Stuart McLean were presented in the morning session of the 2021 Vocabulary SIG Symposium held in Kyoto,…
Descriptors: Vocabulary, Conferences (Gatherings), Conference Papers, English for Academic Purposes
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Ramos Salazar, Leslie – Communication Teacher, 2014
This article describes a speaking problem very common in today's world--"vocalized pauses" (VP). Vocalized pauses are defined as utterances such as "uh," "like," and "um" that occur between words in oral sentences. This practice of everyday speech can affect how a speaker's intentions are…
Descriptors: Public Speaking, Speech Habits, Class Activities, Business Communication
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Geisel, Richard T. – Education Leadership Review, 2015
The purpose of this paper is to highlight current U.S. Supreme Court precedents regarding public employee speech on matters of public concern, and how those precedents are being applied by lower federal courts to public school administrators. Surveying the current legal landscape reveals a heightened vulnerability for school administrators…
Descriptors: School Administration, Administrators, Speech Acts, Speech Communication
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Snyder, David W. – Music Educators Journal, 2011
University programs often require preservice music educators to complete some small- or large-group instruction before beginning student teaching. One of the tools used to deepen these preservice teaching experiences and consequently the pedagogical knowledge for these teachers is to have them reflect on their teaching episodes. Video reflection…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Music Teachers, Music Education, Group Instruction
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Watson, Arden K. – Communication Education, 1982
Describes how the I-CAN newsletter (for administrators and nonacademic persons interested in communication apprehension) was organized and is progressing. (PD)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Newsletters, Speech Habits
Bafumo, Mary Ellen – Teaching Pre K-8, 2006
Language defines leaders. Martin Luther King, Jr., President Franklin Roosevelt, and President John Kennedy are perfect examples of leaders who knew how to use language to inspire others. Teachers are classroom leaders. What they say and how they say it speaks volumes about their professionalism. The article discusses 10 things that teachers can…
Descriptors: Speech Habits, Leadership Qualities, Language Skills, Faculty Development
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Runyan, Charles M.; Runyan, Sara Elizabeth – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 1986
The "fluency rules" therapy program for young children who stutter consists of seven rules designed to teach children about the physiologic concepts associated with fluent speech production. Pilot testing with nine children (three- to seven-years-old) demonstrated its effectiveness in producing fluent speech and maintaining fluency for a…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Physiology, Program Effectiveness, Speech Habits
Johnstone, Barbara; Danielson, Andrew – 2001
This paper explores how one facet of the process by which ideology about linguistic variation originates and circulates. It analyzes an archive consisting of newspaper articles from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, about Pittsburgh speech, the earliest of which is from 1910. The articles began appearing regularly during the 1950s-60s. First, the paper…
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, Ideology, Language Usage, Language Variation
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Kolata, Gina – Science, 1987
Discusses prevailing ideas of how children learn language and addresses the argument of rules versus analogies in learning to form the past tense of verbs. Cites cases involving connectionist models. (ML)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Grammar, Language Processing, Language Research
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Ozzello, Yvonne Rochette – French Review, 1989
The phonological phenomenon of the glottal stop in English is explained. Difficulties encountered by native English speakers in avoiding the use of the glottal stop in French pronunciation are discussed, and techniques for helping students overcome it are explained. (MSE)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Classroom Techniques, English, French
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O'Connell, Daniel C.; Kowal, Sabine – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2004
Erard's (2004) publication in the "New York Times" of a journalistic history of the filled pause serves as the occasion for this critical review of the past half-century of research on the filled pause. Historically, the various phonetic realizations or instantiations of the filled pause have been presented with an odd recurrent admixture of the…
Descriptors: Written Language, Discourse Analysis, Oral Language, Psycholinguistics
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Aaron, Virginia L.; Madison, Charles L. – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 1991
Thirty-six female cheerleaders and their advisors from four high schools participated in the development and evaluation of a preventative vocal hygiene program designed to communicate information about voice and vocal abuse. Pretest/posttest comparison indicated a significant improvement in participants' knowledge and awareness of vocally abusive…
Descriptors: Athletics, Extracurricular Activities, Health Education, High School Students
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Danaher, David S. – Slavic and East European Journal, 1996
Introduces alternative approach to a controversial issue in Czech linguistics--the semantics of verbs of the type "rikavat,""delavat," and so on. The article demonstrates that these verbs can be called habitual verbs in the Peircean sense of the term "habit," and the key to the semantics of these verbs is recognizing…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Czech, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries
Kelly, Lynne – 1982
To provide special instruction for students who report fear and avoidance of communication, a reticence program was instituted at Pennsylvania State University. Since the school has a general speech requirement that nearly all students have to meet in order to graduate, students are given an opportunity to enroll in this special section if they…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Problems, Communication Skills, Course Content
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