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Showing 31 to 45 of 136 results Save | Export
Rescorla, Leslie – 1987
Twelve boys (24-30 months old) with specific expressive language delay (SELD) and with normal development in every other sphere were identified for longitudinal study. Children were videotaped while playing. Analysis using an ordinal play coding scheme revealed strikingly poor pretend play skills. They appeared deficient in either the ability or…
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Infants, Language Handicaps, Longitudinal Studies
Chasteen, Betty – 1982
The teacher of elementary level gifted students discusses successful creative writing activities. Among the reasons for students to learn writing early in the educational program are that written expression complements oral communication, heightens awareness of ordinary experiences, and helps students become more appreciative of language.…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creative Writing, Expressive Language, Gifted
Keiser, Samuel E.; DeLuca, Emeric – 1981
Arguing that to consider only the writer's mental processes is an intellectualist view of the composing process that does not present a fully human way of knowing, this paper takes the position that the writer is more than a mind at work and that an account of the writer as knower must include a consideration of the interaction between mind and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Expressive Language, Language Usage, Learning Theories
Wiig, Elisabeth H.; Semel, Eleanor M. – 1975
Evaluated were language production deficits in 32 learning disabled (LD) adolescents. Ss were administered a battery of subtests containing tasks sensitive to language production difficulties in cognition, convergent and divergent production of semantic units, word retrieval, and retrieval of syntactic structures. Results indicated that speech…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Exceptional Child Research, Expressive Language, Language Ability
Stewig, John Warren – 1985
Noting that too many children leave elementary school without developing the ability to use words imaginatively, this paper presents a teaching approach that uses literature to foster invention in children's writing. The approach described is part of a total composition program that structures writing experiences in which children observe…
Descriptors: Child Language, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Expressive Language
Lorsbach, Thomas C.; Gray, Jeffrey W. – 1985
The study attempted to further clarify the relationship between speed and memory span by directly examining whether slower identification of item information is the source of span difficulties in learning disabled (LD) children. Forty-eight sixth grade boys participated in the study, 24 LD and 24 non-LD. The method involved pretesting each subject…
Descriptors: Etiology, Expressive Language, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades
Benouis, Mustapha K. – 1975
Certain intellectual phenomena, e.g. racist attitudes, are based on fixed formulas of everyday speech. The linguistic roots of such evils must be discerned before they can be exorcised. Some cliches, e.g. racist ones, insinuate themselves into verbal behavior structures. French cliches reflect certain collective French attitudes: positive towards…
Descriptors: Cliches, Expressive Language, French, Idioms
Stanley, Julia P. – 1974
The stylistics of belief is the study of the ways in which language is used by speakers to express their beliefs, to convince other people they are right, or to avoid committing themselves to particular beliefs. Such study can contribute to an understanding of the ways in which people misuse and manipulate language for their own ends. The…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Expressive Language, Figurative Language, Language Usage
Ewald, Helen Rothschild – 1990
Mikhail Bakhtin's concept of dialogism has applications to rhetoric and composition instruction. Dialogism, sometimes translated as intertextuality, is the term Bakhtin used to designate the relation of one utterance to other utterances. Dialogism is not dialogue in the usual sense of the word; it is the context which informs utterance, and…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Discourse Analysis, Expressive Language, Higher Education
Withim, Philip – 1981
Expressiveness in language is necessary for effective communication in every field. Prose should be effective not only in literature but also in science, business, law, and other specialized fields. Writing institutes across the country specialize in a new pedagogy for teaching expository prose, and one of the chief instruments for clarifying this…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Expository Writing, Expressive Language, Faculty Development
Kennedy, Graeme D. – 1985
A study to develop a methodology for discovering how one important notion or semantic category, "frequency of occurrence," is expressed in words, phrases, or other linguistic devices in academic English began with a search for devices expressing that notion, by analyzing text from a news magazine, a New Zealand geography textbook, and a…
Descriptors: Computer Oriented Programs, Expressive Language, Instructional Materials, Language Research
Newman, Jean E.; Canham, Lyn – 1985
A study of the process of listeners' and readers' generation and verification of expectations about spoken and written discourse presented to them examined the possible interactions between surface form and cognitive constraints, to establish baseline measures of the effectiveness of different sentence structures in constraining the production of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Discourse Analysis, Expressive Language
Russo, Lisa L. – 1977
An experiment was conducted to investigate the hypothesis that English cliches reflect sex-specific styles of speech and that sex-specificity of expressions is related to differential usage by male and female speakers. Hypotheses were derived from Tyler's claims that the "neutral sphere" is infused by the male style, rendering it an inhibiting…
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Females, Idioms, Language Patterns
James, Deborah – 1973
This paper examines semantic constraints governing the occurrence of interjections with various other types of grammatical phenomena. Four interjections, "oh,""ah,""say," and "well," which typically occur embedded in sentences, are discussed in terms of their semantic properties and possible contexts. It is…
Descriptors: Adverbs, Expressive Language, Grammar, Idioms
Lewis, Pamela F. – 2001
This brief paper presents a summary of a study which examined the developmental progression of categorization and its relationship to language development in 12 adults with severe to profound mental retardation and with less than 100 words of expressive language (including manual signs). Subjects were asked to sort physically eight miniature…
Descriptors: Adults, Classification, Cognitive Processes, Communication Disorders
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