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Jaeger, Gina – Online Submission, 2011
Traditional grammar instruction is a challenging element of the English curriculum; both students and teachers struggle with the rules and dull nature of grammar. However, understanding grammar is important because students need to understand the language they speak in order to be effective communicators, and teachers provide grammar instruction…
Descriptors: English Curriculum, Community Needs, Grammar, Traditional Grammar
Zekowski, Arlene – 1976
This book, written in an informal dialogue style, develops the thesis that of all the significant forms of art and communication, language alone has remained bound by an outdated, rigid structure--"command grammar"--that inhibits thought and expression. The book explains how language may be freed through use of Neo-Narrative, an "open structure"…
Descriptors: Grammar, Innovation, Language, Language Patterns

Sklar, Elizabeth S. – College Composition and Communication, 1988
Examines the rule that indefinite pronouns (everyone, anybody, each, someone, nobody) take singular verbs and singular pronouns for agreement. Explores its past, proposes a revision of the rule, and suggests modifications in its application based on analysis of its actual use in English. (SR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Research, Pronouns, Standard Spoken Usage
Berne, Stanley – 1976
The central thesis of this book is that the laws of traditional "command grammar" are an obstruction to expression and are too difficult for a majority of people to master, as demonstrated by a progressive deterioration in general literacy skills. The book contends that the structure of the sentence is at the source of the present difficulties. It…
Descriptors: Grammar, History, Innovation, Language

Clark, Sister Mary, S. C. – Language Arts, 1975
Grammar should be taught for its own sake, not as a means to improving student writing because, in fact, it doesn't.
Descriptors: Elementary Education, English Instruction, Grammar, Sentence Diagraming

Wall, Dana – English Journal, 1971
Examines the reasons for and the value of, teaching grammar through drill. Suggests other methods for teaching effective oral and written communication. (RB)
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Elementary Education, Function Words, Linguistics
Reising, R. W. – Elementary English, 1970
Critically analyzes Paul J. Schafer's advocacy (in Return to Normalcy," Elementary English," vol. 47, no. 5 (May 1970), p. 671--see TE 200 730) of a return to the teaching of traditional grammar. (SW)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Sentence Diagraming, Sentence Structure, Teaching Methods

D'Eloia, Sarah – Journal of Basic Writing, 1977
Notes the problems associated with integrating grammar study in writing instruction. Provides strategies for such integration, including a syllabus for teaching the verb phrase. (RL)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Grammar, Higher Education, Sentence Structure
Merchant, Frank – 1976
The teaching of grammar has been in sad decline since medieval times, when it included the whole skill of creating in language. Our textbook community has moved through a series of ineffective fashions, from those of Fries to post-Chomsky. All have presumed to replace prescriptive rules with realistic explanations. But all have fallen, like the…
Descriptors: Deep Structure, English Instruction, Grammar, Higher Education
Cruz Lopez, David – Educ (Puerto Rico), 1969
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Form Classes (Languages), Grammar, Language Instruction
BLAKE, ROBERT W. – 1966
BECAUSE OF LIMITATIONS DURING THE ACTUAL STUDY, THIS PROJECT WAS DELIMITED TO THE STUDY OF THE EFFECTIVENESS OF USING MATERIALS ADAPTED FROM STRUCTURAL AND GENERATIVE GRAMMARS UPON THE ABILITY OF SEVENTH-GRADE STUDENTS TO WRITE MORE MATURE COMPOSITIONS. FORTY-THREE STUDENTS WERE GIVEN EXPERIMENTAL LINGUISTICALLY-ORIENTED MATERIALS DESIGNED TO…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Grade 7, Grammar, Linguistics
Einarsson, Robert – 1999
The history of grammar instruction includes two approaches: the handbook approach, which is practiced today, and the textbook approach. The handbook approach focuses on rules for correct writing and is an error-based view, while the textbook approach would treat grammar holistically and interpretively and would systematically explain new concepts…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction, Grammar, Higher Education

Funkhouser, James L. – College English, 1973
Composition teachers should recognize that all errors in student writing are not the same. The author distinguishes between handbook rules, spoken language, and ambiguity. (MM)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, College Instruction, English Instruction, Language Skills
Guinn, Dorothy Margaret – 1978
In the past, writers have chosen stylistic devices within the parameters of the traditional grammar of style, "Grammar A," characterized by analyticity, coherence, and clarity. But many contemporary writers are creating a new grammar of style, "Grammar B," characterized by synchronicity, discontinuity, and ambiguity, which…
Descriptors: College Students, Communication Problems, Grammar, Innovation
GALE, IRMA FRANCES – 1967
THE PURPOSE OF THIS STUDY WAS TO COMPARE THE COMPLEXITY OF WRITTEN COMPOSITIONS OF FIFTH-GRADE STUDENTS IN A LINGUISTICALLY-ORIENTED LANGUAGE ARTS PROGRAM WITH THE COMPLEXITY OF THE WRITTEN COMPOSITIONS OF STUDENTS WHO WERE TAUGHT TRADITIONAL GRAMMAR. AN EXPERIMENTAL GROUP AND A CONTROL GROUP WERE EACH COMPOSED OF 32 STUDENTS AND WERE EQUALIZED…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Grade 5, Grammar, Language Arts