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Berdan, Robert; Pfaff, Carol W. – 1972
Thirty Black and Anglo kindergarten children from lower and middle income neighborhoods were asked to respond to three different tasks in an effort to investigate seven phonological and syntactical features of Black English and to determine the utility of each elicitation procedure. The interviews consisted of three production tasks which required…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Dialect Studies, Kindergarten Children, Socioeconomic Status
Berdan, Robert – 1972
The 74 studies cited in this selected, annotated bibliography represent major areas of research which may be useful to linguists. Structures Elicitation Techniques (SET) is a term used in contrast to naturalistic observational technique, and the methods referred to in the annotations as SETs are diverse but have in common the elicitation of…
Descriptors: Dialect Studies, Dialects, Language Research, Language Usage
Berdan, Robert – 1972
A structured elicitation technique, convergent communication, was investigated as a means of constraining the range of linguistic data from children in K-3 without unduly constraining the naturalness of the conversation context. The convergent communication situation is a two-person problem-solving task which ensures that all communication is…
Descriptors: Child Language, Data Collection, Dialect Studies, Language Research
Berdan, Robert – 1972
The results of a study in which eight black kindergarten children responded to a set of structured tasks designed to elicit linguistic constructions which characterize Black English are presented and discussed in this Southwest Regional Laboratory (SWRL) technical note. Some of the children responded with a high rate of nonstandard realizations;…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Dialect Studies, Elementary Education
Berdan, Robert – 1972
The syntactic and semantic constraints on the occurrence of HAVE-GOT and GOT, each with the meaning "possess," are analyzed with respect to differences among several ethnic dialects: American Anglo and Black English, British English, and Mexican-American and Puerto Rican English. Data from three sets of interviews which elicited these verbs are…
Descriptors: Child Language, Dialect Studies, Educational Research, Elementary Education