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Milon, John P. – TESOL Quarterly, 1974
Descriptors: Child Language, English (Second Language), Grammar, Japanese
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Ervin-Tripp, Susan – TESOL Quarterly, 1974
Descriptors: Child Language, English, French, Interference (Language)
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Hunt, Kellogg – TESOL Quarterly, 1970
This article discusses the now established" fact that one aspect of language development in native English speakers is the increasing ability to embed larger and larger numbers of sentence consituents and considers its implications for second language acquisition. (FB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Instruction, Language Universals
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Tang, Benita T. – TESOL Quarterly, 1974
Descriptors: Child Language, Childhood Attitudes, Chinese, English (Second Language)
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Dulay, Heidi C.; Burt, Marina K. – TESOL Quarterly, 1974
This study attempts to determine whether the syntactic errors children make while learning a second language are due to native language interference or to developmental cognitive strategies, as has been found in first language acquisition. (Author)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English (Second Language), Error Patterns
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Krashen, Stephen D. – TESOL Quarterly, 1976
Evidence is presented to support the hypothesis that informal and formal environments contribute to different aspects of second language competence, the former affecting acquired competence and the latter affecting learned competence. Data is presented that suggests that the classroom can be used simultaneously as a formal and informal linguistic…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Instruction, Language Research, Learning Processes
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Toohey, Kelleen – TESOL Quarterly, 2001
Analyzes an ethnographic study of child second language (L2) learning, focusing on the disputes that two of the children engaged in. Data reveal how these language events both reflected and helped shape the identities of the children in ways that influenced their opportunities for L2 learning. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Conflict, Discourse Analysis, English (Second Language)
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Boyd, Patricia A. – TESOL Quarterly, 1975
A detailed error analysis was performed on spontaneous and elicited speech samples of Anglo second graders learning Spanish. The results tended to disconfirm the L to the subpower of 1 = L to the subpower of 2 hypothesis that first and second language acquisition follow identical patterns. However, evidence suggests that genuine similarities do…
Descriptors: Child Language, Error Patterns, Grammar, Language Acquisition
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Troike, Rudolph C. – TESOL Quarterly, 1968
Discussed briefly by the author are some of the "most immediately relevant" implications for TESOL which arise from research studies in dialectology. One phenomenon, which until recently has received little attention, is that of "receptive bi-dialectalism" or "bilingualism." One of the earliest observations of this…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Dialect Studies, English (Second Language)
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Gathercole, Virginia C. – TESOL Quarterly, 1988
Reviews research and empirical evidence to refute three first language acquisition myths: (1) comprehension precedes production; (2) children acquire language in a systematic, rule-governed way; and (3) the impetus behind first language acquisition is communicative need. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Language Research
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Cooper, Robert L. – TESOL Quarterly, 1970
Rejects the assumptions which underlie the audiolingual method and offers two alternative propositions: (1) successful use of language requires the acquisition of communicative as well as linguistic competence and (2) first and second language learning are analogous processes. (Author/FB)
Descriptors: Audiolingual Methods, Child Language, Communicative Competence (Languages), Language Instruction
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Urzua, Carole – TESOL Quarterly, 1987
A six-month observational study of Southeast Asian children (N=4) as they wrote and revised various pieces in English (their second language) revealed that the subjects developed three areas of writing skill: a sense of audience, a sense of voice, and a sense of power in language. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Elementary Education, English (Second Language), Feedback
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Crago, Martha B. – TESOL Quarterly, 1993
The role of cultural context in the communicative interaction of young Inuit children, their caregivers, and their non-Inuit teachers was examined in a longitudinal ethnographic study conducted in two small communities of arctic Quebec. Focus was on discourse features of primary language socialization of Inuit families. (32 references) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Caregiver Speech, Child Language, Cultural Context, Discourse Analysis