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Zachary Maher; Carolyn Mazzei; Ebony Terrell Shockley; Tatiana Thonesavanh; Jan Edwards – Reading Research Quarterly, 2024
Despite decades of sociolinguistic research, African American Language (AAL) remains stigmatized throughout the United States education system. There have been proposals to counteract this through curricula and/or ideological interventions targeted at teachers that seek to validate AAL while maintaining Dominant American English (DAE) as an…
Descriptors: Sociolinguistics, Elementary School Teachers, Kindergarten, Grade 1
Craig, Holly K.; Kolenic, Giselle E.; Hensel, Stephanie L. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2014
Purpose: The purpose of this longitudinal study was twofold: to examine shifting from African American English (AAE) to mainstream American English (MAE) across the early elementary grades, when students are first exposed to formal instruction in reading; and to examine how metalinguistic and cognitive variables influenced the students' dialectal…
Descriptors: African American Students, Black Dialects, English, Standard Spoken Usage
Souto-Manning, Mariana – Early Child Development and Care, 2009
As a first-grade teacher preparing for the upcoming year, I was shocked to learn that George was on my new roll. His previous teacher wrote that George was a "behaviour problem", was defiant, talked back to adults, didn't speak properly, was behind academically and spent over half of kindergarten in detention. George initially gave me negative…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, Discourse Analysis, English, Elementary School Students
Dyson, Anne Haas; Smitherman, Geneva – Teachers College Record, 2009
Background: Both academic research and educational policy have focused on the diverse language resources of young schoolchildren. African American Language (AAL) in particular has a rich history of scholarship that both documents its historical evolution and sociolinguistic complexity and reveals the persistent lack of knowledge about AAL in our…
Descriptors: Conferences (Gatherings), Urban Schools, Childrens Writing, Stereotypes
Kincaid, J. Peter; Weaver, Authur J., Jr. – 1974
This study demonstrated that black first grade children from disadvantaged backgrounds understood a Black English version of a story better than an equivalent Standard English version. The testing was done in South Georgia. The story was "peer-prepared," that is, it was a story told by a black child about his own experiences and in his own words.…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Educational Research, English Instruction
Ramsey, Imogene – Elementary English, 1972
Study concluded that use of Negro dialect or standard English made no significant difference in ability to answer literal questions; sex and level of readiness did. (Author/MB)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Comparative Analysis, Grade 1, Listening Comprehension

Cagney, Margaret A. – Reading Teacher, 1977
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Grade 1, Kindergarten, Language Experience Approach
Ramsey, Katherine Imogene – 1970
This study was designed to compare Negro dialect-speaking first graders' comprehension of material presented in standard English and in Negro dialect. Thirty boys and 30 girls from Title 1 schools in a ghetto area were randomly assigned to a standard English or a Negro dialect treatment group after being stratified as male and female and as high,…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Black Dialects, Communication (Thought Transfer), Grade 1
DeStefano, Johanna S. – 1972
Registers--language varieties set apart from other varieties by the social circumstances of their use--are linguistic universals operating in all speech communities. Ghetto black children learn to control registers pertinent to the domain of family and neighborhood--most of which are spoken in their vernacular. Ghetto children are also expected to…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Child Language, Grade 1, Grade 3
King, Viola Daste – 1975
This study attempted to answer five question: do black inner-city students at the first grade level associate Vernacular Black English (VBE) with black speakers and Standard English (SE) with white speakers? Do black inner-city students prefer VBE or SE? Is there a significant relationship between the self-concept of these students and their…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Child Language, Doctoral Dissertations
Knapp, Margaret O. – 1974
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between age, ethnic group, socioeconomic status, and sex, and the development of an awareness of the social and racial significance of language dialects. Eighty children from first and fifth grades served as subjects. The subjects were presented with four tasks: (1) a discrimination task of…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Youth, Doctoral Dissertations, Ethnic Groups