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Prentice, Joan L. – Viewpoints, 1975
Observations of a language development program in an informal classroom of a British infant school. (PD)
Descriptors: Child Development, Communication Skills, Dramatic Play, Kindergarten
Kise, Joan Duff – Academic Therapy, 1982
The author describes ACT (Acting Out Central Theme), a method for dealing with psychomotor, cognitive, and affective domains in slow readers. The ACT approach involves three sessions which focus on discussion of a theme such as friendship, presentaton of the theme as a skit, and assignment of topics to individual students. (SW)
Descriptors: Creative Activities, Dramatic Play, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Acquisition

McKimmey, Martha A. – Children Today, 1993
Play, long seen as an outlet for unused physical and emotional energy, and as a way of learning adult roles, is also recognized for its role in language development in children. Through play, children gain the skill to use symbols and representation for things and events in the environment, providing the basis of their further use of language.…
Descriptors: Childhood Needs, Dramatic Play, Early Childhood Education, Imagination

Chapman, Marilyn L. – Canadian Journal of Research in Early Childhood Education, 2000
Notes that Davidson's book provides an in-depth exploration of the contribution of dramatic play to emergent literacy and ways that teachers can implement play-based literacy learning. Maintains that the book has a balanced theoretical orientation, provides a sensitive treatment of intervention, presents a thoughtful treatment of oral and written…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Dramatic Play, Early Childhood Education, Emergent Literacy
Vater, Ursula – Englisch, 1973
Descriptors: Dramatic Play, English (Second Language), Experiential Learning, Grade 7

Suskind, Diane – Young Children, 1993
Describes Project Desert Shield, a curriculum that preschool children and teachers at a U.S. military base in Germany developed to embrace and constructively deal with the interests and concerns of the children about Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm through dramatic play. (Author/BB)
Descriptors: Coping, Dramatic Play, Foreign Countries, Language Acquisition
Glover-Miller, Bettye J. – 1983
This study describes a language intervention approach using telephones in a classroom to motivate and facilitate spontaneous oral language in a group of language-delayed kindergarten children. Specific purposes of the investigation were (1) to determine what effect the availability of telephones had on the spontaneous oral language of…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques, Dramatic Play, Innovation
Musthafa, Bachrudin – 2001
Children's sociodramatic play is very much associated with their growing ability to use symbols for a variety of functional purposes external to the symbols themselves. Defining such play as "voluntary social role-playing involving two or more children," this paper draws on research on sociodramatic play to: (1) discuss the nature of…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Dramatic Play, Early Childhood Education

McLeod, John N. – English in Australia, 1980
Asserts that literacy can be seen as a dramatic set. Shows how this conceptualization makes sense of the central concerns of language programs and provides an explicit means for developing literacy. Notes that drama activities provide experiences across many linguistic registers. (RL)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creative Dramatics, Drama, Dramatic Play

Soundy, Cathleen S.; Genisio, Margaret Humadi – Childhood Education, 1994
Describes an instructional approach that encourages teachers to guide children in narrating stories based on actual or imagined experiences, particularly those that transpire in the classroom. Discusses ways of incorporating events from dramatic play and everyday occurrences into storytelling activities and offers a story sampler that exemplifies…
Descriptors: Dramatic Play, Emergent Literacy, Imagination, Language Acquisition
Yawkey, Margaret L.; Yawkey, Thomas D. – 1979
A study investigated the effects of symbolic play treated as a mediator for increasing language comprehension and facilitating oral language growth. The study included two aspects of language: language comprehension and language development. Independent variables were forms of play--puppet action, body action, abstract (imagined) action, and no…
Descriptors: Child Language, Comprehension, Developmental Stages, Dramatic Play

DeKroon, Debbie M. A.; Kyte, Christiane S.; Johnson, Carla J. – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2002
A study examined the social pretend play and conversational behaviors of three children (ages 4-6) with language impairment in dyadic interactions with peers. In all dyads, social pretend play yielded greater conversational success than other forms of play. Quality of play varied as a function of partner characteristics. (Contains references.)…
Descriptors: Dramatic Play, Interpersonal Communication, Language Acquisition, Language Impairments
Yawkey, Thomas D. – 1983
Pretend play and language growth are related through representational thought. Fundamental to representational thought are five connectives, at the theoretical level, which link pretend play and language growth: motor actions, roles and role changes, creative expression, concentration, and decentration. At the research level, results of selected…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Dramatic Play, Early Childhood Education, Language Acquisition
Grady, Marion – 1974
This document contains a variety of activities concerned with language development at the elementary level. There are thirteen sections. Section one is a general discussion of the goals of language development. Sections two through twelve list activities covering such topics as how to use various media (cameras, tape recorders, etc.), how to use…
Descriptors: Books, Child Language, Childrens Literature, Class Activities
Bredekamp, Sue – Educational Perspectives, 2005
In this article, the author describes some of the key research findings that demonstrate the relationship between school readiness and preschool play. She begins with definitions of both school readiness and play, and then describes the teacher's role in ensuring that play is used effectively to promote school readiness. The author goes on to…
Descriptors: Play, School Readiness, Reading Readiness, Dramatic Play