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Ediger, Marlow – 2001
Students need to learn the involved patterns of sentences in the English language as well as the inherent structure. First, the paper discusses five common sentence patterns in the English language, with examples. Next, the paper deals with modifiers to extend sentences, including adjectives, adverbs, appositives, and dependent clauses. Finally,…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction, Language Arts, Language Patterns

Holt, Suzanne L.; Vacca, JoAnne L. – Language Arts, 1981
Examines the reading and writing processes and their interdependence and urges the language arts instructor to be an audience for children's writing and to help them become aware that what they read is someone else's writing. (HTH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Language Arts, Language Patterns
Anderson, Nancy – Network News, 1999
Why is it important to take a closer look at the patterns of language, or discourse, in the conversations in Reading Recovery teachers' lessons? Conversations occur throughout the lesson as teachers communicate with children and are not limited to a procedural component of the lesson related to composing. Teachers' theories of the world, literacy…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Language Arts, Language Patterns, Learning Processes
Cronnell, Bruce – 1982
Defining regularity in the English language is not a straightforward matter because of the complex relations between sound and spelling. Predictable patterns are those spellings that can be readily predicted from pronunciation. Rare and unpredictable spellings are found only in a small set of words--probably 10% or less of the vocabulary in…
Descriptors: Classification, Elementary Education, Language Arts, Language Patterns
Woodward, Virginia A. – 1982
Evidence from the language use of young children is used to question accepted notions of language development and instruction in the three papers in this compilation. The first paper, "Young Children Challenge the Belief That Language Needs to be Taught Sequentially," challenges the notion of sequential development in which oral language…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Early Childhood Education, Language Acquisition
Hillman, Judith – 1975
The tradition of reading aloud to children has great intrinsic value and should be continued as part of the language arts program. Five major reasons for reading aloud to children can be gleaned from recent linguistic and psychological research and from folklore and intuition: (1) It allows the modeling of syntactic and phonemic language patterns,…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Identification (Psychology), Imitation