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Cooper, Charles R. – English Journal, 1973
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns, Language Research

Redfern, Richard K. – English Journal, 1996
Explains why people say "for she and I"--and argues that such usage is correct. (RS)
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Usage, Pronouns

Frank, Yakira H. – English Journal, 1972
The author asserts that by integrating literature and language, students will gain deeper insights into both areas. (Author/LF)
Descriptors: Integrated Curriculum, Language Arts, Language Usage, Literary Criticism
Sipe, Rebecca Bowers – English Journal, 2006
As a new faculty member, the author was invited by colleagues to help protect a resource they believed was essential to their instructional program. The importance of teaching grammar in a didactic fashion as a precursor to student writing constituted an unchallenged belief in the department. Faculty members were committed to the notion that…
Descriptors: Grade 8, Form Classes (Languages), Writing (Composition), Grammar

Sanborn, Jean – English Journal, 1986
Shows that grammar teaching fails not merely because of faulty teaching methods or imperfect knowledge of English grammar; it fails because of the inherent nature of language and the nature of the students to whom grammar is taught. Argues that it should not be taught until the last years of high school. (EL)
Descriptors: Educational Theories, English Instruction, Grammar, Language Acquisition

Roen, Duane H. – English Journal, 1984
Warns against the overuse of cohesive conjunctions in writing and recommends that teachers instruct students on contextual use of conjunctions rather than on their random use. (CRH)
Descriptors: Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), Conjunctions, Connected Discourse
Stageberg, Norman C. – English Journal, 1958
The identification and study of 20 syntactical patterns responsible for much of the structural ambiguity found in literary composition can develop in students an audience awareness. When they realize that such constructions as "a dull boy's knife" and "the club will be open to members from Monday to Thursday" can be misinterpreted, they take more…
Descriptors: Audiences, Communication Problems, Communication Skills, Communication (Thought Transfer)
McGuire, Eileen J. – English Journal, 1967
When ninth-grade students are searching for help in expressing their newly discovered ideas, the principles of transformational grammar can be brought to their aid in the following ways: (1) Assign a provocative topic to the students which they are to discuss as fully as possible in one sentence. (2) Present only the kernel sentences of a…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Grade 9, Grammar, Junior High School Students

Shuman, R. Baird – English Journal, 1990
Describes a classroom grammatical activity in which the teacher isolates typical sentences from textbooks and writes the individual words on placards. Describes how students are each given a placard and asked to form a sentence. Reports that students enjoyed this activity and began to get the feel of language and sentence structure. (RS)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Grammar, Language Skills, Secondary Education
Schuster, Edgar H. – English Journal, 2005
An English teacher provides some sentence comparison activities that enlarge students' linguistic resources for writing. He believes that students can learn to revise for style if they recognize the stylistic choices writers make.
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Sentence Structure, English Teachers, Writing Instruction
Church, Frank C. – English Journal, 1967
Phonological rules based on "stress-terminal pattern" (the principle that a phonological phrase has one primary stress and one terminal juncture requiring a mark of punctuation) can be used to improve punctuation in composition. These rules require that the writer be able to speak sentences at a normal pace with intonation appropriate to the…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, English Instruction, Intonation, Language Patterns

Vavra, Ed – English Journal, 1987
Argues that problems in teaching grammar stem from failure to help students develop, as opposed to memorize, grammatical concepts. Recommends discussion of style and vocabulary, student stylistic analysis of their own writing, and deciphering syntactic use, not just definition, of parts of speech. Suggests that such training should begin in…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Grammar, Language Arts, Sentence Structure
Zidonis, Frank J. – English Journal, 1967
English teachers have a responsibility to interpret for students the current linguistic insights into language and to lead them in an open-minded inquiry involving (1) careful observation of language data, (2) translation of this observation into rule-like descriptions, and (3) verification of the rules to determine if revisions must be made. In…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Deep Structure, English Curriculum, English Instruction

Mamchur, Carolyn – English Journal, 1984
Describes a teaching method that uses the student's growing need to use the language as motivation. (CRH)
Descriptors: Adjectives, Language Usage, Literature Appreciation, Motivation Techniques

Taylor, Sharon J. – English Journal, 1986
Discusses insights and concerns growing out of a study in which middle school and high school language arts teachers examined the research in the teaching of grammar and examined the content, methods, and materials of their own grammar curriculum. Details process guidelines and content guidelines that were developed. (EL)
Descriptors: Educational Research, Educational Theories, English Curriculum, English Instruction