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Myerson, Rosemarie – 1976
Seventy-two children, 18 from each of grades three, six, nine, and twelve, participated in a study of developmental changes in children's knowledge about the morphological structures underlying the spoken form of complex derived words. Three oral language tests were used to show when and how children learn that derived words are not unanalyzable…
Descriptors: Child Language, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Ruddell, Robert B. – 1969
A child's language development during the elementary school years is described, with emphasis on acquisition and control of structural and lexical dimensions of the language of standard and nonstandard speakers and with special concern for the relationship between language production and the reading process. Numerous research studies are reviewed…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Learning Levels, Language Research
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Hart, N.W.M. – 1976
Children's mastery of reading skills would be facilitated if reading programs capitalized on children's already-developed oral language competence. Barriers against "reading for meaning" exist when the cues used for predicting in oral language are not present in the written language which confronts children; yet anaylses of four reading…
Descriptors: Basic Reading, Beginning Reading, Child Language, Language Patterns
Wolf-Ward, Maryanne – 1977
The shift from viewing reading as primarily a perceptual process to viewing it as primarily a linguistic process, combined with the consideration of reading failure as not one but many disabilities, formed the basis for the assumption that there exists a duo-symbiosis between reading and speech and between speech and word-finding. The development…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns
Dauzat, Samuel Varner – 1968
The relationship between oral reading ability and the use of structure (function) words was examined in a dissertation study which hypothesized that the use of structure words in verbal discourse would be greater in children who have no difficulty in oral reading than in children who experience difficulty. Structure words were identified as those…
Descriptors: Child Language, Form Classes (Languages), Function Words, Grade 4
Dahl, Sandra Sue – 1975
This study was designed to identify specific language variables that could prove to be useful as predictors of a child's success in beginning reading. The study is theoretical in nature and provides background information that may be useful in future empirical investigations. A review of the literature on child language acquisition was conducted.…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Child Language, Doctoral Dissertations, Early Childhood Education
Williamson, Leon E. – 1983
Concerned with what can be done to help produce more thoughtful, critical readers, this report first presents an historical overview of theories on the origin of language, referring to B. F. Skinner, Noam Chomsky, and Jean Piaget, among others. It then discusses biological reasons for the evolution of language and the impact of verbal language on…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Child Language, Cognitive Development, Decoding (Reading)