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Campbell, Kim Sydow – Educational Research Quarterly, 1990
Evidence is presented that the analogy between oral and written language development is misleading and that literacy has few of the characteristics of naturally acquired behaviors. It is contended that researchers should concentrate on the differences between oral and written language development. (SLD)
Descriptors: Child Development, Early Childhood Education, Educational Research, Emergent Literacy
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Egan, Kieran – Australian Journal of Education, 1991
Prevailing conceptions of young children's mental life represent children's thinking as confused and lacking western rationality. Instead, we should consider their mental life as a positive oral culture, and evolve a new science of early childhood education based on understanding of peoples in oral cultures. (MSE)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cultural Traits, Early Childhood Education, Educational Theories
Guillen-Diaz, Carmen – Francais dans le Monde, 1990
A classroom approach that brings oral and written language learning closer together is outlined. The strategy focuses on proper pronunciation using minimal pairs and uses exercises designed for listening and visualization, production, discrimination, re-use and reinforcement, and computer-assisted instruction. (MSE)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classification, Classroom Techniques, Educational Strategies
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Developmental Psychology, 2005
What is the role of oral language in reading competence during the transition to school? Is oral language in preschool best conceptualized as vocabulary knowledge or as more comprehensive language including grammar, vocabulary, and semantics? These questions were examined longitudinally using 1,137 children from the National Institute of Child…
Descriptors: Early Reading, Primary Education, Semantics, Grammar
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Adams, Karen – Higher Education Research and Development, 2004
Most postgraduate research students face the task of presenting an oral seminar on their proposed research early in their candidature. Those of us who work with international postgraduate research students know that they can find this task daunting, and the literature both in Australia and abroad confirms that these students often lack confidence…
Descriptors: Seminars, Foreign Students, Oral Language, Self Efficacy
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Hesketh, Anne – Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 2004
The primary objective was to compare the grammatical output of children with language disorders on different tasks. Sixty-five children with language disorders, aged six to eleven, completed the syntactic formulation (elicitation) and narrative subtests from the Assessment of Comprehension and Expression 6-11 (Adams et al. 2001). Grammatical…
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Impairments, Comparative Analysis, Syntax
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Pikulski, John J.; Chard, David J. – Reading Teacher, 2005
A deep, developmental construct and definition of fluency, in which fluency and reading comprehension have a reciprocal relationship, is explicated and contrasted with superficial approaches to that construct. The historical development of fluency is outlined, along with conclusions of the U.S. National Reading Panel, to explore why fluency has…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Language Skills, Spelling, Reading Comprehension
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Newman, Rochelle S.; German, Diane J. – Language and Speech, 2005
This study investigated how lexical access in naming tasks (picture naming, naming to open-ended sentences, and naming to category exemplars) might be influenced by different lexical factors during adolescence and adulthood. Participants included 1075 individuals, ranging in age from 12 to 83 years. Lexical factors examined included word frequency…
Descriptors: Oral Language, Language Processing, Age Differences, Adolescents
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Chen, Xin; Striano, Tricia; Rakoczy, Hannes – Developmental Science, 2004
Twenty-five newborn infants were tested for auditory-oral matching behavior when presented with the consonant sound /m/ and the vowel sound /a/--a precursor behavior to vocal imitation. Auditory-oral matching behavior by the infant was operationally defined as showing the mouth movement appropriate for producing the model sound just heard (mouth…
Descriptors: Vowels, Imitation, Neonates, Young Children
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de Klerk, Vivian – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2006
The paper analyses selected aspects of the codeswitching behaviour in a spoken corpus of the English of 326 people, all of them mother-tongue speakers of Xhosa (a local African language in South Africa), and all of whom would see themselves as Xhosa/English bilinguals. The corpus comprises approximately 550,000 transcribed words of spontaneous,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Bilingualism, Code Switching (Language), African Languages
Nemeth T., Eniko – 1994
A discussion of Hungarian spoken discourse focuses on the role of two pragmatic connectives, "hat" ("well, so (after all)") and "mert" ("because"). Introductory sections discuss the classification of utterance-types as a prerequisite to analyzing discourse and the utterance-type as defined by pragmatic…
Descriptors: Coherence, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries, Hungarian
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Forester, Anne D. – Theory into Practice, 1980
If the beginning spellers are allowed to experiment, their ability will begin to evolve and refine as did their patterns of spoken language. Stages of spelling development and their parallels in oral language development are described and tips on how to foster spelling development are given. (JN)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Language Acquisition, Oral Language, Primary Education
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Wescott, Alice Legenza – Reading Improvement, 1980
Establishes the validity of the Picture Potency Formula as a tool to predict the extent to which children will respond to pictures. (FL)
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Educational Research, Elementary Education, Illustrations
Dumenil, Annie – Polylingua, 1990
Discusses two phonological features of standard French, mid-vowels and mute e, with respect to their formal description. The wide variation involved in the use of these features by native speakers is presented, and the way that this variation adds to the complexities of language learning and teaching is examined. (JL/Author)
Descriptors: French, Language Variation, Native Speakers, Oral Language
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O'Grady, William; And Others – Journal of Child Language, 1989
Proposes that the optional subject phenomenon in early child language arises because children have not yet acquired the morphological elements (primarily modal and tense) necessary to distinguish subject-taking verbs (e.g., finite verbs) from their non-subject-taking counterparts (e.g., infinitives). (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Linguistic Theory, Morphology (Languages)
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