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Showing 1 to 15 of 22 results Save | Export
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Hendricks, Alison Eisel; Jerard, Jillian; Guo, Ling-Yu – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2023
Purpose: Measures of grammatical accuracy are effective measures of children's language skills. However, many measures, such as percent grammatical utterances, were developed for children who speak General American English (GAE) and, therefore, may not be appropriate for students who speak other dialects. This study examines different scoring…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Grammar, Accuracy, Language Skills
Loflin, Marvin D. – J Eng Sec Lang, 1969
The underlying thesis of this article is that Nonstandard Negro English differs in its deep structure from Standard English. (Author/FWB)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Contrastive Linguistics, Deep Structure, English
Malmstrom, Jean – Florida F L Rep, 1969
Updated versions of "Dialects ("The Florida FL Reporter, Winter 1966-1967). Appears in "The Florida FL Reporter special anthology issue "Linguistic-Cultural Differences and American Education. (FWB)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Creoles, Dialects, Nonstandard Dialects
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Pfaff, Carol W. – 1972
Four realizations of the copula occur in English, two in both Anglo and Black English and two in Black English and in some varieties of Anglo English but not in standard English. This paper describes the use of the copula in English and identifies the phonological, syntactic, and semantic factors which are believed to condition its realization in…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Dialects, Language Patterns, Nonstandard Dialects
Pfaff, Carol W.; Berdan, Robert – 1972
The Dialect Differentiation Measure (DDM) provides an objective, quantifiable means of identifying speakers of Black English. Three production tasks, designed to constrain the range of linguistic constructions with which a child may respond, elicit seven phonological and syntactic features characteristic of Black English. The DDM was tried out in…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Black Dialects, Black Youth, Kindergarten
Pfaff, Carol W. – 1972
During the past fifteen years, a variety of linguistic analyses of the tense and aspect systems of dialects of English has been conducted. These analyses were bounded by several analytic dimensions. This paper treats three of these dimensions and discusses their interrelationships and implications in relation to two dialects--Black English and…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Dialects, Nonstandard Dialects, North American English
Ellsworth, Jennifer K. – 1980
This study examines the effect of classrooms where standard English is spoken on the speech of Black English speaking children. The research analyzed samples of language used by 22 Black English speaking children in seven kindergarten classrooms in three Madison, Wisconsin public schools during one academic year, 1977-78. The following questions…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Classroom Environment, Early Childhood Education, Language Patterns
Gray, Barbara Quint – 1976
This study examined the syntax of the naturalistic speech of 15 three-to-five-year-old urban, lower-class black children, to determine (1) their syntactic maturity compared to white middle-class children of the same age, as measured by mean utterance length, types of transformations used, and number of sentence-combining transformations per t-unit…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Child Language, Disadvantaged Youth, Early Childhood Education
Ginther, Dean Webster – 1976
Interrelationships between productive oral proficiency in black dialect and in standard English and reading comprehension of passages differing in dialect and content were investigated in a sample of 98 sixth-grade black students. Results indicated that students were better readers as their oral patterns of speech were more representative of…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Doctoral Dissertations, Failure
Reiter, Arlene – 1974
This study investigated the effect of black dialect upon the comprehension of standard reading material by using 50 third-grade students. A sentence repetition test was administered individually to each subject to select pupils for either the standard or the dialect group. Subjects were tested for oral comprehension and silent reading…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Black Dialects, Elementary Education, Grade 3
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Fogel, Howard; Ehri, Linnea C. – Journal of Teacher Education, 2006
Many U.S. students speak nonstandard forms of English, yet dialect issues are slighted in teacher education programs and literacy courses. In this study, classroom teachers who spoke Standard American English (SE) were familiarized with seven syntactic features characterizing African American English (AAE). Three approaches to instruction based on…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, North American English, Standard Spoken Usage, Inservice Teacher Education
Flegenheimer, Hannah – 1975
This study was designed to explore the role of the syntax of beginning readers' spoken language in their reading performance. In order to be able to isolate and manipulate the syntactic variable, two alternative forms of English, Standard English and Black English, were used. Sixty second-grade children participated in the study. Each child was…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Black Dialects, Doctoral Dissertations, English
Foster, Herbert Lawrence – 1969
The purpose of this study was to discover the effect of the introduction of nonstandard English dialect and lexicon in the classroom and to test the hypotheses that students exposed to oral material in dialect and lexicon would comprehend more, would have greater verbal recall, and would be more flexible and fluent in assigning titles to oral…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Creative Writing, Disadvantaged, English Instruction
Houston, Susan H. – 1968
On the basis of a study of the language of 22 black children in a rural county of northern Florida, the author states that apart from geographical dialects, there are two "genera" of English: Black (BE) and White (WE). Within each of these genera there are two varieties: Educated and Uneducated. These are further defined by…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Deep Structure, Dialect Studies, Economically Disadvantaged
Loflin, Marvin D. – 1967
Identifiable relational entities in the Auxiliary (Aux) structure of Nonstandard Negro English (NNE) enter into different sets of relationship from identifiable relational entities in the Aux structure of Standard English (SE). Specifically, there is an absence of "have + en" structures; there is no agreement between subjects and verbal forms…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Deep Structure, Dialect Studies, Morphophonemics
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