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Gray, Shelley – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2003
This study examined the relationship between fast mapping and word learning and between comprehension and production of new words with 30 young children with specific language impairment (SLI). Results suggest that children with SLI may need to hear a new word twice as many times as other children before comprehending and independently using the…
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Language Acquisition, Language Impairments, Preschool Children
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Heller, Irma; Manning, Diane; Pavur, Debbie; Wagner, Karen – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 1998
Describes how two teachers taught English Sign Language to 29 children (age 3) in a regular education preschool program which included 2 children with hearing impairments. When compared to 25 children who were not taught signing, the children who had been taught signing had significantly higher receptive vocabulary scores and were clearly superior…
Descriptors: Hearing Impairments, Inclusive Schools, Language Acquisition, Language Skills
Oviatt, Sharon L. – Papers and Reports on Child Language Development, 1985
A study of children's recognitory comprehension, the rudimentary ability to begin decoding the content of language, at the end of the first year had as subjects 36 infants aged 10.5, 11.5, and 12.5 months. In an examination of monthly developmental change in their ability to comprehend newly introduced referential terms, the children were exposed…
Descriptors: Child Language, Developmental Stages, Infants, Intellectual Development
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Parsons, Stephen; Law, James; Gascoigne, Marie – Child Language Teaching and Therapy, 2005
Children with specific language impairment (SLI) frequently experience difficulties with understanding vocabulary and are subsequently academically disadvantaged. This study describes a curriculum-based assessment and therapy technique and its implementation with two children with language difficulties. Mathematical vocabulary that the children…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Educationally Disadvantaged, Therapy, Curriculum Based Assessment
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Howe, Bill – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1982
A program was developed to increase the receptive and expressive language skills of 24 secondary learning-disabled students. Program units covered word sorting, sight-word vocabulary, key-word reading, reading rate, reading comprehension, listening, and writing. (Author/SW)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Expressive Language, Language Acquisition, Learning Disabilities
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Gibbs, Simon – Educational Research, 2004
Two groups of children with moderate bilateral sensorineural hearing loss were studied. Tests of reading and underpinning skills were administered. Comparisons were made with normally hearing children of the same age. While reading levels were found to be similar to their hearing peers, the phonological awareness and receptive vocabularies of the…
Descriptors: Phonological Awareness, Vocabulary Development, Reading Skills, Hearing Impairments
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Seung, HyeKyeung; Holmes, Alice; Colburn, Michelle – Volta Review, 2005
This study was a longitudinal examination (21 month follow-up) of language development in a pair of fraternal twins. One twin received a cochlear implant at age 20 months secondary to sensorineural hearing loss. The other twin had normal hearing. Data were obtained every 6 months following her initial cochlear implant stimulation. Both twins…
Descriptors: Twins, Hearing Impairments, Assistive Technology, Vocabulary Skills
Bunish, Norbert T. – 1988
Written by a counselor-teacher-program coordinator working in an urban elementary school, this practicum aimed to improve the receptive vocabulary development program for second grade students. Specific goals were to: (1) improve second grade students' receptive vocabulary; (2) use students' improved receptive vocabulary to increase their reading…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 2, Primary Education, Program Development
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Hill, L. A. – Zielsprache Englisch, 1980
Describes a teaching method for vocabulary development based on word formation by means of affixes. Discusses inflectional and derivational suffixes, prefixes, and their meaning. Offers examples of practice materials and of receptive and productive tests. (MES)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Grammar, Instructional Materials, Reading Comprehension
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Gilbertson, Margie; Kamhi, Alan G. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1995
This study found that word learning ability in only 10 of 20 children (ages 7-10) with hearing impairment (HI) was comparable to performance of 20 hearing children matched for receptive vocabulary knowledge. Degree of hearing loss was not related to language or word-learning abilities. Results suggest the coexistence of a language impairment for…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Hearing Impairments, Individual Differences, Language Acquisition
Wilbur, Ronnie B.; Menn, Lise – 1975
Evidence for speaker knowledge of morphological patterns, both derivational and inflectional, is not limited to productive patterns. Nonproductive patterns appear to be accessible in such a way that accessibility (a term preferred to "psychological reality") may be viewed as a function of four somewhat interdependent factors: (1) productivity, (2)…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Definitions, Dictionaries, Language Acquisition
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Goldstein, Howard; Brown, William H. – Education and Treatment of Children, 1989
Two experiments investigated the effects of peer modeling on the acquisition of receptive and expressive language responses. Experiment 1 studied lexical learning among five children who were mildly/moderately developmentally disabled. Experiment 2 investigated the observational learning of receptive and expressive language responses by two…
Descriptors: Developmental Disabilities, Expressive Language, Language Acquisition, Language Handicaps
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Gunn, Barbara; Feil, Ed; Seeley, John; Severson, Herb; Walker, Hill M. – NHSA Dialog, 2006
This article reports the results of a pilot intervention to improve the social skills and literacy preparation of behaviorally at-risk Head Start children. Teachers in eight Head Start classrooms in two Oregon communities participated during the 2002-03 school year. Children in eight classrooms were screened and identified for participation using…
Descriptors: Intervention, Disadvantaged Youth, Emergent Literacy, Interpersonal Competence
Morgan, Robert L. – 1987
Progressive time delay is presented as a nonintrusive method of teaching receptive vocabulary to a 5-year-old girl with severe mental retardation. The girl was trained in pointing to photographs of various unfamiliar objects when the object was named by the teacher. Results indicate that the presentation of a time delay procedure resulted in a…
Descriptors: Identification, Instructional Effectiveness, Preschool Education, Receptive Language
Davies, Norman F. – 1980
Although the constraints of time and environment under which most language learning is done mean that a natural language situation can never be reproduced in school, many of the findings from first language acquisition studies apply to second language (L2) learning. This would mean therefore that instead of stressing speaking in a beginning L2…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Language Acquisition, Language Research, Language Skills
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