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Harber, Jean R. – 1978
The number of minority children who are placed in special education programs is disproportionate to the number of minority children in school. One factor causing this situation is that dialect interference causes lower reading scores among minority children. Since few standardized tests instruct the teacher to ignore errors attributable to…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Elementary Education, Interference (Language), Learning Problems
Straker, Dolores Y. – 1980
A study was undertaken to examine how the variables that comprise the construct social situation (interlocutor, setting, and topic) influenced which language variety--standard English (SE) or black English (BE)--was chosen as a means of communication within a black English-speaking community and how that language variety was used to elaborate…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Contrastive Linguistics, Higher Education
GLADNEY, MILDRED R.; LEAVERTON, LLOYD – 1968
AFTER TAPE RECORDING AND ANALYZING INFORMAL CONVERSATIONS WITH KINDERGARTEN AND THIRD-GRADE NEGRO CHILDREN IN THE CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS, A PROGRAM OF LANGUAGE ARTS INSTRUCTION WAS DRAWN UP TO (1) USE ACTUAL STATEMENTS MADE BY THE CHILD IN HIS DIALECT FOR CONTRAST WITH STANDARD ENGLISH, (2) LIMIT PATTERN PRACTICE TO VERBS AND TO STATEMENTS EASILY…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Education, Black Students, Disadvantaged
Whiteman, Marcia Farr, Ed. – 1980
The papers in this collection provide a brief state-of-the-art statement on the role of non-standard dialects of English in education and on some implications of the Ann Arbor decision. The following papers are included: (1) "Vernacular Black English: Setting the Issues in Time," by Roger W. Shuy; (2) "Beyond Black English:…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Education, Court Litigation, Dialect Studies
Elifson, Joan M. – 1977
This paper relates linguistic theory and bidialectalism, synthesizes theory and research concerning bidialectalism, and presents suggestions for a curriculum designed to maximize students' self-conscious control over their speech. Instructional activities, which have standard English as their goal, include pattern drills, short memorized dramas,…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Linguistic Theory
Belcher, Mary S. – 1973
Eighty disadvantaged black third grade students were administered both reading achievement and oral language tests to determine whether the phonology, morphology, and grammar of Black English dialect have more effect on the below-average readers of the group than on those students making satisfactory reading progress. Student scores on the…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Disadvantaged Youth, Language Usage
Lewis, Shirley A. R.; Hoover, Mary R. – 1979
This booklet outlines the content and activities of two workshops aimed at improving the teaching of children who speak Black English. Its goals are to supplement research reports on test development in the area of Black English and to serve as a useful starting point for those who rely on the workshop format to inform teachers about Black English…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, English Education, Language Attitudes, Language Styles
Cockrell, Wilma; Johnson, Kenneth R. – 1967
This teaching guide , developed with ESEA Title I funds, outlines an oral English program to help Negro students eliminate nonstandard pronunciation and usage in their speech. The first part consists of three lessons to motivate the students, which develop particular concepts about language. The second and third parts contain pronunciation and…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Grade 10, Lesson Plans
Wright, Richard Louis – 1976
This study examines linguistic form and communication style in working-class and middle-class black preachers of two types: those who are not seminary trained, who preach spontaneously, and those who are seminary trained, who read from a prepared text. Ten sermons were tape-recorded in natural settings at two churches in Washington, D.C. Analyses…
Descriptors: Adults, Black Dialects, Clergy, Doctoral Dissertations
Gay, Judy; Tweney, Ryan D. – 1975
This study attempted to assess the linguistic competence of black lower-class speakers within each of two language systems: standard English and Black English. The subjects were 72 black kindergarten, third-, and sixth-graders in a predominantly black community in Toledo, Ohio. All children attending the school were considered lower-class, since…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Elementary Education, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Shuy, Roger W. – 1975
Knowledge about how language works is often considered superfluous by the public. In general, the public image of language is that language is in a serious decline and that outside influences on language have led it astray, views that are supported by false assumptions about language on the part of writers. Writers in newspapers and magazines note…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Black Dialects, Dialects, Language Standardization
Quay, Lorene C.; And Others – 1976
Although lower socioeconomic status (SES) black children have been shown to be inferior to middle-SES white children in communication accuracy, whether the problem is in encoding (production), decoding (comprehension), or both is not clear. To evaluate encoding and decoding separately, tape recordings of picture descriptions were obtained from…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Communication (Thought Transfer), Elementary Education, Language Research
Lamb, Pose – 1976
The primary focus of this paper is on black children and the relationship between their productive and receptive language competencies. The solutions which have been proposed to solve the dilemma of black pupils' poor reading achievement are discussed. It is noted that none of the proposed solutions has the unqualified support provided by a mass…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Black Dialects, Cognitive Processes, Dialects
Harrison, Deborah Sears, Ed.; Trabasso, Tom, Ed. – 1976
The sixteen essays collected in this volume reflect a cross-section of ethnic and professional viewpoints toward Black English. Written by resident and visiting lecturers who took part in a seminar offered by the psychology department of Princeton University, the essays are grouped by subject areas: (1) "Definition" focuses on the schism between…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black Studies, Diachronic Linguistics
Anderson, Edward – 1976
The value of teaching Standard English as the language of school and mainstream middle class culture is undisputed, yet Black English, as a non-standard English dialect, has great potential as an instructional tool in the composition classroom. The use of the black dialect can help expand black students' intellectual potential by de-stigmatizing…
Descriptors: African Languages, Bilingualism, Black Dialects, Diachronic Linguistics
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