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Flower, Linda – Written Communication, 1996
Maintains that the move from theorizing difference to dealing with difference in an intercultural collaboration creates generative conflicts for educators and students. Tracks the conflicting discourses, alternative representations, and political consequences the construct "Black English" had for black and white mentors, teenage writers, and…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Blacks, Cooperative Learning, Cultural Awareness
Carter, Linda Carol – 1994
For the past 25 years, controversy has developed over the value and use of African-American (AA) English. This study examined the opinions of AAs from a variety of backgrounds and communities in California and Georgia to obtain their views on AA English; its place in the school, in the community, and in AA heritage; and its role in the futures of…
Descriptors: Black Attitudes, Black Dialects, Grammatical Acceptability, Language Styles
Hindman, Jane E.; Robinson, Michael A. – 1994
A video tape of a freshman composition student at the University of Arizona shows the difficulty she has faced in writing classes because of her black dialect. Her instructor points out that the student, after some of the readdings in class, recognizes that she has learned code switching on her own to survive in the educational system; this…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Collaborative Writing, Cultural Differences
Redd, Teresa M. – 1992
Two studies compared the impact of black and white audiences on black students' writing style. In the first study, eight students in an all-black intermediate composition class completed one argumentative draft addressed to black opponents and one addressed to white opponents on two different topics. The essays were examined for stylistic features…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Black Dialects, Black Students, Discourse Analysis
Wolfram, Walt – 1992
A construction occurring in African American Vernacular English (AAVE) is examined: NPi "call" NPi V"-ing", as in "the woman call herself working." First, a number of reasons that such a form might be overlooked or dismissed as an AAVE dialect form are outlined. Then the sociolinguistic method is applied to the…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Dialects, Grammar, Language Patterns
Rakes, Thomas A.; Canter, Emily – Elementary English, 1974
Children who come from economically disadvantaged backgrounds and speak in nonstandard dialects should not be made to feel inferior but should be listened to. (JH)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Economically Disadvantaged, Language Acquisition, Language Instruction
O'Donnell, Holly – Elementary English, 1974
The teacher of black students needs to develop a sensitivity to their rich communicative language styles in order to use the varied styles in the classroom situation. (JH)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Elementary Education, English Education, Language Instruction
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Rose, Jeanne Marie – Composition Forum, 2005
In this essay, the author suggests that recent developments in English studies and popular culture create an opportune moment for writing teachers to welcome such literature in composition curricula. The author describes how studying stories by John Edgar Wideman enabled first-year composition students to engage political and interpersonal issues…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Literature, English
Jones, J. Arthur – 1990
This paper is a critical review of Eleanor Orr's theory that African American students have difficulty with mathematical and scientific concepts because they speak Black English. Orr's data are criticized on many levels. For instance, her facts are derived from a limited subject pool and she has failed to take into account other possible reasons…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Education, Black Students, Educational Quality
Lucas, Ceil; And Others – 1983
A study of spontaneous language use by elementary school children and teachers in a wide range of classroom activities used a combination of observation, audiotaping, videotaping, and interviews to examine more closely the role of dialect diversity in elementary education. The study provides a more accurate and complete record of classroom life…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Child Language, Classroom Communication, Elementary Education
Sledd, James – 1984
Standard English has not disappeared, but merely changed as it "must" change when the dominant class setting the standard undergoes change. If teachers are to succeed in persuading pupils to change their language, they must know and teach the standard as it is, not as it used to be, while still implanting in the minds of some students…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Dialects, Educational Policy, Educational Practices
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Quay, Lorene C. – Child Development, 1974
The Stanford-Binet intelligence test was administered by 104 third- and sixth-grade, disadvantaged black children in Negro non-standard dialect and in standard English. Younger children performed better than older children. No significant differences were found between dialect and standard-English test administrations. (ST)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Black Dialects, Comprehension, Disadvantaged
Granger, Robert C.; Ramig, Christopher J. – 1978
Eighty-four students in a graduate course on methods and materials for reading in the elementary school participated in a study of the effects of black dialect syntactical features on teacher judgements of reader ability. Each person listened to four tape recordings of the same 255-word passage. The recordings varied by race of reader, number of…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Elementary Education, Miscue Analysis, Oral Reading
Heard, Gladys C.; Stokes, Louise D. – 1975
In a case study investigation of six black college freshmen from low socio-economic and black nonstandard English-speaking backgrounds, it was found that, as hypothesized, the students reflected in their writing a performance capability in standard English sufficient to render them functionally bidialectal. For these students, certain hypothesized…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, College Freshmen, Higher Education, Language Research
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Anderson, Donald – Negro Educational Review, 1975
The stated purpose of this discussion is to examine the rationale of the language cognitive deficit model used to describe the educationally disadvantaged black -- a model which assumes that Black English lacks the organization and logic characterizing Standard Spoken English -- and to argue that the model is irrelevant to both educational…
Descriptors: Bias, Black Dialects, Black Youth, Blacks
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