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Tompkins, Phillip K. – 1989
In examining Kenneth Burke's maxim "ad bellum purificandum" (translated as "the purification of war"), it seems plausible to infer that Burke's entire system of thought was based on his outrage toward war and the misuse of symbols that makes war possible. Burke saw his criticisms of war not as mere passiveness but rather as…
Descriptors: Ethics, Rhetorical Criticism, Science and Society, Symbolic Language
Tochon, Francois Victor – 1998
Spaces of meaning are stratified to establish congruence among those belonging to the same semiotic "beams." Individuals may be geographically close yet unable to cooperate because they are not attuned to the same semiotic territory. Families of signs characterize each semiotic territory in which inhabitants are linked conceptually. Symbols and…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Foreign Countries, Language Patterns, Semiotics
Wright, H. Curtis – 1985
Librarianship is the management of knowledge, not the management of nature, i.e., it is controlled by ideas, not by phenomena. The man/document interface provides a key for creating the philosophy of librarianship and a clue to the intellectual nature of the library profession. Because librarianship occurs whenever ideas are reused, librarians…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Epistemology, Librarians, Library Education
Burtis, John O. – 1987
Arguing that understanding human interaction requires both a study of symbol use and a study of human action, this paper focuses on one function served by symbolization--fantasizing. Drawing upon the work of R. F. Bales, who identified the sharing of group fantasies as a useful communication function and who observed the process by which group…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Communication Research, Communication (Thought Transfer), Fantasy
Collett, Jerry R. – 1974
The concept of private languages holds that each person's words are symbols with which he identifies certain of his perceptions. Language operates in the public sphere only so long as the symbols used by a speaker to denote his perceptions roughly correspond to the symbols the listener uses for his perceptions. The philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein…
Descriptors: Drama, Language Role, Language Universals, Perception
Gowen, Jean W. – 1978
The structural elements of the spontaneous symbolic play of 2- and 3-year-olds were compared with those of 4- and 5-year-olds. All 32 children studied were enrolled in a private day care center. Each child was observed during free play in the center for 15 minutes. Three categories of signifiers (animate, inanimate and imaginary) and five modes of…
Descriptors: Imagination, Infants, Play, Preschool Children
Harman, Anna M.; Hollingsworth, Patricia B. – 1978
A study involving 12 students (7 to 20 years old) was conducted to show that a population, classified as trainable mentally retarded, in a non-institutionalized, non-residential public school setting could learn to use the Blissymbolics system to "talk" by pointing to the appropriate symbol. In the 3 months of the project's initial…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Exceptional Child Research, Mental Retardation
LeBlanc, Mark D. – 1994
Relating natural language to mathematical language is an important component of elementary mathematics education. This paper describes new steps toward a computerized database of addition and subtraction word problems that could provide teachers and students with access to critical natural language terms and expressions for mathematical…
Descriptors: Addition, Arithmetic, Computer Simulation, Databases
Dance, Frank E. X. – 1984
The intent of a liberal education is to enhance the student's freedom, the faculty of intentional choice. The capacity of humans to step outside of themselves, which allows development of self-concept and subsequently self-esteem, is potentiated by the humans' unique sign, the symbol. Each of the liberal arts is concerned with the development and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Higher Education, Language Usage, Liberal Arts
Burroughs, Jill A.; And Others – 1989
The study contrasted the learning of the Rebus and Bliss symbol systems by language-delayed preschoolers. Subjects included 26 black preschool children, aged 4-6. Results showed that Rebus pre-test and post-test scores were significantly higher than Bliss pre-test and post-test scores. Results also showed a 35% improvement in identification of…
Descriptors: Black Youth, Language Acquisition, Language Handicaps, Pictorial Stimuli
Vaughn, Mina A. – 1985
A descriptive, qualitative research design was used in a study that examined the formal socialization process in high technology organizations. The primary objective was to determine if organiations involved in high technology tended to exhibit similar symbology in the discourse produced by management for the formal socialization process. Data…
Descriptors: Business, Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Organizational Communication
Hazlett, J. Stephen – 1979
The characteristics, responsibilities, and functions of curriculum professors are examined using a symbolic approach. Education is an area of endeavor representing a high level of symbolic activity, and insofar as curriculum centers on what is or should be taught in the schools and how it should be treated, curriculum workers occupy symbolically…
Descriptors: College Curriculum, College Faculty, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development
Sinatra, Richard – 1973
This paper discusses several studies concerned with relating words to visual images, and suggests a visual strategy to generate writing at the secondary level. The three objectives of a visual writing strategy are to increase stimulation and involvement in writing activities, to guide the student in inferring organizational styles of writing from…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Language Learning Levels, Photographs, Pictorial Stimuli
Collins, Sue; Hearn, Ralene – 1993
This paper presents three units of study and discusses ways that teachers can incorporate Kenneth Burke's ideas on symbolic action into the basic communication course. The three units discussed in the paper address: meaning in language and symbolic reality; persuasion; and rhetorical criticism. Each unit includes a brief introduction to the topic,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Introductory Courses, Language Usage, Persuasive Discourse
Dyson, Anne Haas – 1983
A study was conducted to examine the interrelationships between drawing, early writing, and the context of talk in which both phenomena occur. Participant observation methodology was used in a self-contained public school kindergarten in order to gather daily data during a 3-month period. Specifically, children freely drew and wrote in an…
Descriptors: Child Language, Freehand Drawing, Handwriting, Kindergarten
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