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Peer reviewedConti-Ramsden, Gina – Topics in Language Disorders, 1985
Methodological issues that may account for discrepant findings in research on mother-child dialogue are cited, and studies of normal language-learning children and their mothers are reviewed along with cross-cultural studies. How language impaired children act on their linguistic environment and within which interaction situations is seen as…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Interaction, Language Handicaps, Mothers
Peer reviewedOlson, John – Curriculum Inquiry, 1983
The author comments on clarifying the meaning behind teachers' use of language. He points out that information collected through classroom observation would be more useful if teachers were included in the interpretation. (MD)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Dialogs (Language), Elementary Secondary Education, Observation
Peer reviewedFleck, A. – System, 1982
Presents guidelines for organization of conversation groups and suggests conversational activities for first year of language study including directed dialogs, use of questions, telephone vocabulary, and restaurant activities. Emphasizes importance of teacher supervision of, rather than participation in, conversational activities. (Author/BK)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Dialogs (Language), Second Language Instruction, Teaching Methods
Peer reviewedYetim, Fahri – Review of Information Science, 1996
Presents an approach which can provide explanations to user questions in human-machine communication in a flexible way. To determine the contents of explanations, scripts are used which have different optional components organized according to the intentions of user questions to meet their information needs. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Hypermedia, Information Needs, Man Machine Systems
Peer reviewedMurray, Michael; Murtagh, Brendan – Community Development Journal, 2003
Explains the context for equity, diversity, and interdependence (EDI), followed by a case study of a Northern Ireland service organization using the EDI process to help articulate the voice of rural community groups. Illustrates the value of concerted dialogue to facilitate systemic relational change in organizations and with their constituents.…
Descriptors: Community Change, Community Organizations, Dialogs (Language), Diversity
Peer reviewedFletcher, Janet; Stirling, Lesley; Mushin, Ilana; Wales, Roger – Language and Speech, 2002
Eight map task dialogs representative of general Australian English were coded for speaker turn and for dialog acts using a version of SWBD-DAMSL, a dialog act annotation scheme. High, low, simple, and complex rising tunes, and any corresponding dialog act codes were then compared. The Australian statement high rise (usually realized as a L…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Dialogs (Language), Foreign Countries, Intonation
Peer reviewedSanta, Tracy – Writing Center Journal, 2002
Examines what happens when writing center directors ask tutors to enter conversation, not just with clients, but with other writing center ractitioners--when tutors move beyond advice and into the professional discourse of writing centers. Suggests that writing centers need to consider a dialogic approach that invites tutors and their disparate…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Higher Education, Instructional Improvement, Professional Development
Peer reviewedRoberts, Nancy C. – Public Administration Review, 2002
Discusses Harmon's Accountability Paradox in relation to the accountability of public officials. Promotes the use of dialogue because its advantage outweighs its cost as a mechanism of accountability when officials confront problems that defy definition and solution and when traditional solution methods have failed. (Contains 54 references.) (JOW)
Descriptors: Accountability, Administrator Responsibility, Dialogs (Language), Public Administration
Peer reviewedBavelas, Janet Beavin – Research on Language and Social Interaction, 1999
Describes a Utopian vision of a new multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary field called "Dialogue," that would unite researchers with a common focus on dialogue. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Discourse Analysis, Interaction, Interdisciplinary Approach
Peer reviewedFenwick, Tara J. – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2001
Responders to a journal may include peers, instructors, and oneself. Responders must balance direction and freedom in assisting the writer. Methods include descriptive personal response, holistic assessment, and partial assessment of passages selected by the writer. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Dialogs (Language), Feedback, Journal Writing
Peer reviewedKent, Michael L.; Taylor, Maureen – Public Relations Review, 2002
Explains the concept of dialogue in order to reduce the ambiguity that surrounds the use of the term. Seeks to make the concept of dialogue more accessible for scholars and practitioners interested in relationship building. Traces the roots of dialogue, identifies several over-arching tenets, and provides three ways that organizations can…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Ethics, Higher Education, Interpersonal Relationship
Peer reviewedShankman, Ray – International Journal of Applied Semiotics, 1999
One teacher-researcher pursues a dialogue to reflect on his own teaching practice, through enlivening conversation with two inspiring teachers. Shows that dimension can be discovered through talk. Examines methods through which dialogue is achieved and through which some account of the creative process contributing to the formation of this work is…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Dialogs (Language), Discourse Analysis, Reflective Teaching
Moss, Wendy – RaPAL Bulletin, 2000
Describes how tapes and transcripts from student-tutor pairs in adult literacy groups were examined to analyze the transition from speech to writing. Discusses the difference between written and spoken English. Provides examples of how passages were transcribed. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Literacy, Dialogs (Language), Language Experience Approach, Speech Communication
Peer reviewedSmith, Shawn, K. – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2005
Dialogue challenges students to answer the basic questions of art production often not thought about by elementary and middle school students: Why did you choose to do that? What are you trying to communicate to the viewer? How does this piece make you feel? Educational theorist Howard Gardner defines the artistic process as one involving the work…
Descriptors: Educational Experience, Art Products, Classroom Techniques, Art Education
Rule, Peter – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2004
This paper develops the notions of dialogue and dialogic space in relation to adult education projects with emancipatory agendas. It explores the philosophical genealogy of the notion of dialogue in order to establish a basis for the concept of dialogic space, surveying the works of seminal figures such as Plato, Buber, Bakhtin, Habermas and…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Dialogs (Language), Educational History

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