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No Child Left Behind Act 20011
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Levy, Nancy R. – 1982
"Grammar Graphics" is a technique for teaching English grammar to children in grades three through five using symbols to represent each part of speech. In this way children can graphically perceive and understand the function of words in a sentence. Basically the students learn symbols for all parts of speech except the preposition and conjunction…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Elementary Education, Form Classes (Languages), Learning Activities
Wresch, William – 1982
Four recently developed computer programs can help students with the composition process. The first, a prewriting program, helps students prepare to write by asking them a series of questions, similar to those an instructor would ask, intended to help them think more deeply about their subject. The second writing program also contains prewriting…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Programs, Editing, Higher Education
Mitchell, Ruth – 1981
Researchers in many disciplines dislike writing and view it as an additional and unnecessary irritant. Teaching researchers to write for administrators who must make decisions about highly specialized topics, but who lack the specialist's knowledge, means inducing a change in the researchers' perspective. They have to learn that they are writing…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Language Styles, Postsecondary Education, Research Reports
Engel, Elyse; And Others – 1979
The contents of this handbook are designed to help teachers clarify, in their own minds, many of the grammatical points that might be raised in the English as a second language classroom. Each chapter ends with exercises and a discussion of classroom implications of the topics raised. Chapter I covers parts of speech, including nouns, verbs,…
Descriptors: Adjectives, Classroom Techniques, English (Second Language), Grammar
Tomlinson, Barbara; Straehley, Marcia – 1978
Students' abilities in manipulation and control of syntax may be increased through a sequence of instruction involving the use of exercises termed "Non-Sentence Practice,""Nonsense-Sentences Practice," and "Syntactic Patterning Practice." The final step in the instruction sequence is to make the syntactic exercises pertinent to students' writing…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Expository Writing, Higher Education, Kernel Sentences
Bosco, Joseph Anthony – 1967
In this study, fourth-grade materials based on a linguistic approach to grammar known as sector analysis were devised, field-tested, and evaluated. Two socioeconomically similar fourth grades--experimental and control groups--were pre- and post-tested to find possible changes in the complexity of their sentence structure after the experimental…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, English Instruction, Grade 4, Grammar
Rutherford, William E. – 1973
The thesis that classroom instruction in the grammatical forms of a language is undesirable, currently held by a number of applied linguists, is rejected. However, although it has been found that inducement of grammatical consciousness is not necessarily a pedagogical liability, its worth depends to a large extent upon the kinds of facts to be…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), English (Second Language), Grammar, Instructional Materials
Jung, Raymond K. – California English Journal, 1971
A model for helping classroom teachers understand and evaluate the growth of children in oral and written compositions is presented. The recommended procedure is centered around T-unit analysis. The following sequence is one possible way the T-unit analysis procedure might be used by an elementary school teacher: (1) Divide all the sentences of a…
Descriptors: Child Language, Elementary School Students, Evaluation Methods, Language Acquisition
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Journalism Educator, 1984
Describes various teaching strategies for journalism students, among them peer evaluation, interviewing exercises, question answering sessions, and syntactic structures. (HOD)
Descriptors: Group Activities, Higher Education, Interviews, Journalism Education
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Ross, Janet – College Composition and Communication, 1971
Descriptors: College Freshmen, College Instruction, Educational Research, English Instruction
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Simons, Herbert D. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1971
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, Psycholinguistics, Reading Comprehension, Reading Instruction
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Schaarschmidt, Gunter – Russian Language Journal, 1979
Describes a sequence for teaching the Russian passive construction to exemplify how a learning sequence based on a contrastive analysis and on error analysis can lessen student errors. These errors are caused either by interference from the first language or over-generalization in the second language. (PMJ)
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Error Analysis (Language), Interference (Language), Language Instruction
Happ, Heinz – Etudes de Linguistique Appliquee, 1978
Describes the theory of "dependential grammar" and how it can be used in language teaching, specifically in the area of syntax. (AM)
Descriptors: French, German, Grammar, Greek
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Lubell, Marcia; Townsend, Ruth – Journal of Reading, 1989
Describes a methodology for teaching the complex prose structures common to nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature. Identifies modifying structures, conditional structures, and periodic sentences as stumbling blocks for students. Argues that students should be taught the effect of these structures on the meaning of both the sentence and the…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Literature Appreciation, Nineteenth Century Literature, Novels
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Winitz, Harris – Modern Language Journal, 1996
Investigated whether the methodologies of explicit and implicit language instruction account for differences in the identification of grammatically well-formed sentences for college students of Spanish. Results showed that students receiving implicit instruction scored significantly higher in a grammaticality judgment test than those receiving…
Descriptors: College Students, Grammar, Higher Education, Second Language Instruction
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