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Torrey, Jane W. – Harvard Educ Rev, 1970
Educational institutions at all levels must respect the dialects of Negro students and initiate programs of instruction in these dialects. Only in this way can discrimination in fact against this minority group in our culture be stopped. (CK)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Culture Conflict, English
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Denson, Marquita D. – English in Texas, 1995
Explains how teachers might go about equitably and fairly teaching standard written English when African American students in the class speak black English. Argues that black English, which has been 400 years in the making, is worthy of tolerance and respect for all its richness. (TB)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Torrey, Jane W. – American Educational Research Journal, 1983
Black children's language abilities should not be judged by their schoolyard grammar. Use of Standard English "s" endings in spontaneous speech is not as good a predictor of school language achievements as is the use of those endings in reading and school grammatical or comprehension tests. (Author/DWH)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Black Dialects, Black Students, Grade 2
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Marwit, Samuel J.; Marwit, Karen L. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1973
Article investigated the hypothesis that Caucasian subjects supply significantly more standard English, and Negro subjects supply significantly more predictable nonstandard English endings to present, plural, possessive, and time extension words, and that differences are obtained regardless of the standard or nonstandard English mode of…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Elementary School Students, Grammar
Wolfram, Walt; Whiteman, Marcia – 1971
Despite the recent focus on the role of dialect differences in creating learning difficulties for speakers of nonstandard dialects of English, research has tended to concentrate on difficulties related to speaking and reading, while ignoring those involved in teaching writing to these students. This paper attempts to meet the need for such studies…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Grammar, High School Students
Scott, Jerrie Cobb – 1976
This study addressed the following three questions: Among the grammatical patterns that first graders are expected to be able to read, are there any which are particularly easy or particularly difficult to interpret? Can these grammatical patterns be mastered with equal ease by students of varying reading ability? Do these grammatical patterns…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Doctoral Dissertations, Grammar
Cleveland State Univ., OH. – 1986
Materials concerning dialects and language variation are presented here as background information for a workshop on English dialect differences in elementary and secondary schools. Articles and essays include: "Grammatical, Phonological and Language Use Differences across Cultures" (Walt Wolfram); "A Linguistic Description of Social Dialects"…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Culture Conflict, Dialects
Bailey, Beryl Loftman – Elementary English, 1968
Every child entering elementary school has acquired an adequate control of the basic structures of some language system. The English teacher must tailor his goals and methods to exploit this competence. The basic linguistic system which has been internalized by children who speak non-standard English is different enough from standard English to…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Black Dialects, Black Students, Creoles
Anderson, Edmund A. – 1970
This report is an overview of the most frequently recurring grammatical structures in the speech of ten-year-old to twelve-year-old black children from lower socioeconomic neighborhoods in Baltimore. The speech sample consists of three types of speech situations: playing games with peers, talking with an older white interviewer, and telling…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Black Youth, Disadvantaged Youth
Jeremiah, Milford A. – 1986
Some errors in adult black students' writing cannot be analyzed merely within the traditional hierarchy of grammatical rules; a look at sociological factors is germane to an evaluation of students' writing ability or inability. Data for an analysis of black adult students' writing at the syntactic level have shown that problems of clarity might be…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Cultural Context, Error Analysis (Language)
Politzer, Robert L.; Hoover, Mary R. – 1972
This experiment deals with a test of auditory discrimination between standard Black English and nonstandard Black English. The test consists of two sections, one emphasizing phonological variables and the other emphasizing grammatical variables. It was administered to 83 black and 71 white children who were second, fourth, and sixth graders in…
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Black Dialects, Black Students, Elementary School Students
Politzer, Robert L.; Brown, Dwight – 1973
As part of the development of a battery of tests to determine proficiency in black standard and nonstandard speech, the authors developed a two-part test consisting of 20 items designed to evoke a response by means of verbal and pictorial cues. Each cue was supposed to elicit a specific grammatical construction characteristic of either black…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Black Dialects, Black Students, Elementary School Students
Marwit, Samuel, J.; And Others – 1971
It has recently been noted that Negro children, especially those of lower socioeconomic status, have a language system whose phonological and grammatical rules differ in predictable ways from the rules governing the standard English used by most white Americans. Four features of Negro non- standard American English have been noted with predictable…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Elementary School Students, Grammar
Williamson, Juanita V. – 1968
The purpose of this study is to describe the speech of Negro high school students in Memphis, Tennessee. The study deals with the phonology and grammar of the students' speech. The phonological analysis is limited to a description of the segmental phonemes, their allophones, and their incidence. The grammatical analysis is limited to a description…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Black Youth, Blacks
Williams, Teresa Ernestine; Loyd, Brenda H. – 1982
The study investigated the issue of differential selection of foils (incorrect responses) with Black English structures by black and white examinees. Linguistic research revealed systematic differences between Black English and Standard American English. Grammatical and phonological features were important distinctions. Five categories of Black…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Dialect Studies, Grammar
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