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Jeanine Treffers-Daller – ELT Journal, 2024
The concept of translanguaging is one of the most successful ones in the recent history of multilingualism research. But what does it really mean? It covers such a wide semantic field that users seem to be free to decide its meaning in whatever way they wish. A key uniting idea of the different approaches is that teachers should 'draw upon' the…
Descriptors: Translation, Multilingualism, Language Research, Semantics
The Unforgettable "Mel": Pragmatic Inferences Affect How Children Acquire and Remember Word Meanings
Katherine Trice; Dionysia Saratsli; Anna Papafragou; Zhenghan Qi – Developmental Science, 2025
Children can acquire novel word meanings by using pragmatic cues. However, previous literature has frequently focused on in-the-moment word-to-meaning mappings, not delayed retention of novel vocabulary. Here, we examine how children use pragmatics as they learn and retain novel words. Thirty-three younger children (mean age: 5.0, range: 4.0-6.0,…
Descriptors: Children, Young Children, Language Acquisition, Semantics
Chris J. Cookson – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2025
This paper details the methodology originally used for a cross-sector literature review of formative evaluation in Germany. The study involved an online keyword search using academic databases and Google Search to uncover documents containing and meaningfully discussing formative evaluation as well as alternative forms of this term in German that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, German, Formative Evaluation, Semantics
Kristin Nellenbach; Carrie Knight; Bailey Jennings – Perspectives of the ASHA Special Interest Groups, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate language development and disorders course titles across communication sciences and disorders (CSD) graduate programs in an effort to determine whether adolescents were specifically being recognized via inclusive language or dedicated courses. The findings can be used to propel important…
Descriptors: Masters Programs, Communication Disorders, Communication (Thought Transfer), Speech Instruction
Yinuo Zhu; Mengmeng Cai; Pei Wang; Xin Chang – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2025
This study, employing unmasked priming lexical decision tasks, examines the possible effects of the phonogram properties on the representation of Chinese phonograms and their radicals. In Experiment 1, the representation of radicals (semantic radical and phonetic radical) and their host phonograms is compared under various phonograms types.…
Descriptors: Chinese, Form Classes (Languages), Word Recognition, Phonics
Alina Arseniev-Koehler – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
Measuring meaning is a central problem in cultural sociology and word embeddings may offer powerful new tools to do so. But like any tool, they build on and exert theoretical assumptions. In this paper, I theorize the ways in which word embeddings model three core premises of a structural linguistic theory of meaning: that meaning is coherent,…
Descriptors: Semantics, Sociology, Language Usage, Structural Linguistics
Rebecca Zhu; Alison Gopnik – Child Development, 2024
Three preregistered experiments, conducted in 2021, investigated whether English-speaking American preschoolers (N = 120; 4-6 years; 54 females, predominantly White) and adults (N = 80; 18-52 years; 59 females, predominantly Asian) metonymically extend owners' names to owned objects--an extension not typically found in English. In Experiment 1, 5-…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Adults, English, Young Children
Yasuki Noguchi – npj Science of Learning, 2024
When we memorize multiple words simultaneously, semantic relatedness among those words assists memory. For example, the information about "apple", "banana," and "orange" will be connected via a common concept of "fruits" and become easy to retain and recall. Neural mechanisms underlying this semantic…
Descriptors: Memory, Semantics, Short Term Memory, Brain
Robert A. Peterson – Journal of Marketing Education, 2025
"What 'is' marketing?" Perusal of the marketing literature reveals that "marketing" has been defined and characterized in multiple, often inconsistent but typically ambiguous, ways that have evolved over time. The present essay argues that characterizing marketing as a transdisciplinary body of knowledge formally captures its…
Descriptors: Marketing, Interdisciplinary Approach, Business Education, Semantics
Felipe Cárdenas-Támara; Johanna Choconta Bejarano – Critical Education, 2025
This study aimed to understand, from a critical point of view, the condition of semantic, discursive, and rhetorical displacement that operates in the Colombian educational system, where the category of education has been displaced by the concept of competence. The following question guides the investigation: What are the deep meanings, from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Educational Policy, Competency Based Education
Dymarska, Agata; Connell, Louise; Banks, Briony – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2023
Semantic richness theory predicts that words with richer, more distinctive semantic representations should facilitate performance in a word recognition memory task. We investigated the contribution of multiple aspects of sensorimotor experience--those relating to the body, communication, food, and objects--to word recognition memory, by analyzing…
Descriptors: Memory, Semantics, Word Recognition, Sensory Experience
Beekhuizen, Barend; Armstrong, Blair C.; Stevenson, Suzanne – Cognitive Science, 2021
Lexical ambiguity--the phenomenon of a single word having multiple, distinguishable senses--is pervasive in language. Both the degree of ambiguity of a word (roughly, its number of senses) and the relatedness of those senses have been found to have widespread effects on language acquisition and processing. Recently, distributional approaches to…
Descriptors: Ambiguity (Semantics), Lexicology, Semantics, English
Xieling Chen; Di Zou; Gary Cheng; Haoran Xie – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
The rise of massive open online courses (MOOCs) brings rich opportunities for understanding learners' experiences based on analyzing learner-generated content such as course reviews. Traditionally, the unstructured textual data is analyzed qualitatively via manual coding, thus failing to offer a timely understanding of the learner's experiences.…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Semantics, Course Evaluation, MOOCs
Simon M. Ceh; Alexander P. Christensen; Izabela Lebuda; Mathias Benedek – Creativity Research Journal, 2024
The present study explored the public conceptualization of creativity on Twitter through co-listed hashtags associated with #creativity in a million tweets. Exploratory Graph Analysis was used to identify a network of semantic clusters, and a pre-trained language model yielded the sentiment of the underlying tweets. The semantic clusters reflect…
Descriptors: Creativity, Social Media, Telecommunications, Semantics
Reinertsen, Anne Beate – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2022
The rhizome is like the poem. The growth power of nature and the possibilities of culture simultaneously and reciprocally. It stretches from biological cell and level of particles to our universal dreams and thoughts about and with life. The rhizome as poem is thus a picture and image of the importance of context and movement, production of…
Descriptors: Poetry, Academic Language, Educational Philosophy, Theory Practice Relationship