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Peer reviewedPfaff, Carol W. – Language in Society, 1976
Results of a study are discussed which involved first grade black children who produced multiple instances of linguistic variables. The suggestion is made that the standard English "is" and "has" in certain constructions have been reanalyzed as nominal inflections. (RM)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Child Language, Elementary School Students, Grammar
Peer reviewedHoover, Mary Rhodes – Language in Society, 1978
Describes research in which 28 black parents and community people were polled as to their attitudes toward vernacular and standard Black English. Attitudes were assessed in four domains--school, home, community and playground--and in four channels--reading, speaking, writing and listening. Standard Black English was preferred in all domains and…
Descriptors: Black Attitudes, Black Community, Black Dialects, Code Switching (Language)
Peer reviewedWolck, Wolfgang – Linguistics, 1976
The shift from regional to social variation in linguistic behavior has necessitated inclusion of larger numbers of informants in studies. This paper examines some sampling techniques and discusses the structuring of a community profile representative of a target population and exhibiting necessary social variation for accurate dialect study. (CHK)
Descriptors: Community Characteristics, Community Study, Community Surveys, Dialect Studies
Peer reviewedRichards, Jack C. – Language Learning, 1979
Describes the processes by which distinctive varieties of English develop in areas where English functions as a second language. The distinctions between rhetorical and communicative norms for speech events in these varieties are discussed. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Dialect Studies, English, Language Styles
Peer reviewedGrimshaw, Allen D. – Social Problems, 1979
The language which is spoken and abilities in its social use are critical individual attributes in association with access to life chances. Sociolinguistic variables have been neglected by sociologists and language related social problems are neither recognized nor understood. (Author/RLV)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Dialects, Disadvantaged, Language Ability
Peer reviewedFeldman, Carol Fleisher; And Others – TESOL Quarterly, 1977
Some data dispute the common assumption of linguists that speakers of nonstandard varieties of English lack functional command of Standard English. Hawaiian high school students were found equally competent in Standard and Hawaiian English. Implications of this finding for educational practices in Hawaii are discussed. (CHK)
Descriptors: Creoles, Dialects, Language Ability, Language of Instruction
Peer reviewedTolliver-Weddington, Gloria – Journal of Black Studies, 1979
In this article, the terms "Ebonics" and "Mainstream American English" are defined. (Author/MC)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Education, Language Variation
Peer reviewedFilmer, Alice Ashton – World Englishes, 2003
Critically examines assumptions in teaching in a bi-dialectal context. Presents ethnographic data from one teacher's experience teaching a summer course in Shakespearean theater in which the students were speakers of African-American English. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, English, Ethnography, Language Variation
Peer reviewedSchneider, Edgar W. – Language, 2003
Discussing World Englishes, outlines a basic developmental scentrio, and suggests that speech communities typically undergo five consecutive phases in this process--foundation, exonormative stabilization, nativization, endonormative stabilization, and differentiation. Describes the sociolinguistic characteristics of each one. The framework is…
Descriptors: Dialects, Foreign Countries, Language Variation, Sociolinguistics
PDF pending restorationHameyer, Klaus; Grosse, Carmen – 1976
It is suggested that the static model of language which is prerequisite for contrastive analysis is inadequate in pinpointing potential difficulties in second language learning. The student learning graphemic-phonetic correspondences encounters two types of difficulties not exposed by contrastive analysis: dialectal difficulties and reading…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Contrastive Linguistics, Dialects, Error Analysis (Language)
Wheeler, Rebecca S. – Educational Leadership, 2008
Many teachers lack the linguistic training required to build on the language skills that African American students from dialectally diverse backgrounds bring to school. When students correctly use the language patterns of their communities, such teachers may diagnose language deficits and attempt to teach them the "right" grammar. Research has…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, African American Students, Language Patterns, Language Variation
Frazer, Timothy C.; Livingston-Webber, Joan – 1992
Students of English around the world are commonly taught according to one of two models, "British" English, and "American" English. Indeed, there is a persistent popular myth (present in many linguistics and second-language texts) that a single "Midwestern" variety of American English exists. The usage of the term…
Descriptors: Dialect Studies, Higher Education, Language Variation, Linguistics
Kochman, Thomas – 1983
To be culturally valid, the characteristics identified by dialectologists as distinctive of black English must correspond to the terms members of the black community use to characterize their speech. Not all of the patterns that characterize black English within the dialectal framework are equal in their social or ethnic significance--the speech…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Black Culture, Black Dialects, Cultural Awareness
Shores, David L. – South Atlantic Bulletin, 1974
Examines attitudes in the Black community towards the topic of Black English and specifically the controversy about the relationship of the speech of Blacks to that of Whites, the distinctive features in the speaking and writing of Black college students, and the attitudes of Black educators. Available from South Atlantic Modern Language…
Descriptors: Black Attitudes, Black Community, Black Dialects, Distinctive Features (Language)
Metcalf, Allan A. – 1979
The English spoken by Spanish-surnamed Americans of the southwestern United States often has a Spanish flavor, even though the speakers may have no competence in Spanish. This Chicano English is discussed in a series of descriptions based on a number of previous studies of regional variations. Each description covers pronunciation, intonation,…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Dialect Studies, English, Intonation

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