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Showing 1 to 15 of 61 results Save | Export
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Mixan, Marisa – Reading Improvement, 2019
Vocabulary development is a crucial aspect of literacy. It is our duty as teachers to enrich the language of our students to better prepare them for a successful lifetime of communication. This paper offers several methods to enhance levels of speech in the classroom. Some of the techniques included are the use of repetitive reading, reading…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods, Oral Reading
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Usman, Abdurrahman Hi – Journal of Education and Practice, 2015
This research was conducted to improve students' English speaking ability by using the think-pair-share strategy designed in CAR. The findings in Cycle 1 was unsuccessful because the students' average scores was 74.18 and classroom atmospheres were "mid" that did not meet the criteria of success. Therefore, the implementation of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Speech Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Mixan, Marisa – Reading Improvement, 2013
Vocabulary development is a crucial aspect of literacy. It is our duty as teachers to enrich the language of our students to better prepare them for a successful lifetime of communication. This paper offers several methods to enhance levels of speech in the classroom. Some of the techniques included are the use of repetitive reading, reading…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Literacy, Speech Improvement, Speech Skills
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Wilhelm, R. Dwight – Communication Education, 1986
Describes areas in which aspiring broadcast announcers can be helped, such as correct voice production, precise articulation, proper consonant formation, etc. (PD)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Broadcast Industry, Secondary Education, Speech Improvement
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Rumbough, Timothy B. – New Jersey Journal of Communication, 1999
Examines how the impromptu speech exercise affects trait and situational communication apprehension (CA). Uses McCroskey's Personal Report of Communication Apprehension to study trait CA and Clevenger's Speaker Anxiety Scale to measure situational CA. Indicates that subjects who completed the impromptu speech significantly lowered their…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Higher Education, Speech Communication, Speech Improvement
FLETCHER, JUANITA D. – 1960
THE SPEECH IMPROVEMENT COURSE IS CONCERNED PRIMARILY WITH THE DEVELOPMENT OF CORRECT HABITS OF ORAL COMMUNICATION IN SECONDARY SCHOOL STUDENTS. SUCH A COURSE SHOULD BE CONCERNED WITH IMPROVEMENT IN THREE MAIN AREAS-PROJECTION, AGREEABLE QUALITY, AND INTELLIGIBILITY. THE MOST IMPORTANT UNIT OF THE PROGRAM, PERHAPS, IS ITS LAUNCHING. STUDENTS SHOULD…
Descriptors: Curriculum Guides, Secondary Schools, Speech, Speech Communication
Jackman, Norma F. – Elementary English, 1973
Descriptors: Intermediate Grades, Language Arts, Multimedia Instruction, Speech Habits
Barresi, Anthony L.; Simons, Harriet – Music Educ J, 1969
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Instruction, Music Education, Secondary School Curriculum
Hollien, Harry – 1972
A vocal register is a series or range of consecutive frequencies that can be produced with nearly identical voice quality. On the basis of research three fundamental registers can be defined and described: pulse, a low range of phonation; modal, a middle or "normal" range; and loft, a high range, described by some as falsetto. These…
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Auditory Perception, Physiology, Speech Evaluation
Smith, V. A. – 1989
The key element to the survival of speech communication and its status in academe is the basic course, which tells the academic community what speech communication is and what it can produce in terms of observable student behavior. This basic course, upon which many communication departments depend, must produce students who are obviously trained…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Diction, Higher Education, Oral Interpretation
Parks, Arlie Muller – 1972
The use of behavioral objectives is challenged on three bases: feasibility, utility, and advisability. Behavioral objectives, however, are useful in teaching speech communication. They allow the teacher to start to pinpoint the items the student needs to practice in order to improve. If students are trained to decide which behaviors they wish to…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Communication (Thought Transfer), Feedback, Public Speaking
Ryan, Bruce P.; Van Kirk, Barbara A. – 1974
Compared in a 2-year study were four establishment of fluency programs in a public school setting with 40 7- to 16-year-old children who stuttered. The programs included programmed traditional (PT), delayed auditory feedback (DAF), pause (P), and gradual increase in length and complexity of utterance (GILCU). During the first year, eight speech…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Language Fluency, Program Effectiveness, Speech Handicaps
Bozik, Mary – 1985
The keeping of journals by students in the basic speech course is the focus of this paper, which is divided into three parts. Part 1 examines the benefits of journal use to students and teachers and points out that three types of learning can thus be encouraged: the development of thinking skills, personal growth, and content learning. It also…
Descriptors: Assignments, Class Activities, Higher Education, Speech Communication
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Gunderson, D. F.; Hopper, Robert – Communication Monographs, 1976
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Instructional Improvement, Persuasive Discourse, Public Speaking
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Umberger, Forrest G. – Reading Improvement, 1979
Reports on activities that the regular classroom teacher can incorporate into the speech arts curriculum that will help to eliminate the high incidence of vocal disorders in students. Includes a description of the mechanics of voice production and exercises designed to help children use their voices more efficiently. (FL)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Speech Education, Speech Handicaps, Speech Improvement
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