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Abrar-Ul-Hassan, Shahid – TESOL Journal, 2011
Studies on the human language system have brought to the fore two key aspects. First, the prime function of language is communication. Second, language exists in the social world. The language learning process takes place within the sociocultural context and the relevant macrostructures that influence language use and development. According to the…
Descriptors: Language Role, Communication (Thought Transfer), Social Environment, Human Body
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Whyte, Shona – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2011
Second language study in French universities includes both modern language (literary) and foreign language (communicative) approaches, although teaching is dominated by the literary strand. Traditional educational models based on the transmission of knowledge are unable to accommodate recent progress in our understanding of learning theory, which…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Language Research, Second Language Learning, French
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Miller, Don – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2011
Developing reading skills in a second language presents learners with many challenges, including lexico-grammatical decoding. An additional challenge is posed by the different registers of written text and the associated lexico-grammatical features with which learners must contend. Questioning the efficacy of using non-academic reading texts in…
Descriptors: Readability, Textbooks, Form Classes (Languages), Grammar
Reima Al-Jarf – Online Submission, 2011
A rubric is a scoring guide that consists of specific pre-established performance criteria, used for evaluating students' work. iRubric is a comprehensive digital rubric development, assessment, and sharing tool that shows the major skills and sub-skills to be mastered, the different mastery levels, and marks allocated to each level. This article…
Descriptors: Teacher Empowerment, Scoring Rubrics, Educational Technology, Student Evaluation
Seymour, Kendra Chanti Nicolette – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This dissertation examines the Imperfective aspectual system of urban Bahamian Creole English (BahE), a mesolectal creole spoken in The Bahamas. Specifically, following Comrie (1976) I examine three Imperfective aspectual categories in the creole--continuous progressiveness (variable auxiliary "be" use with V- "ing" verbs and…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, Creoles, Verbs, English
Barrios, Edison – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Linguists tell us that the sentence "I enjoyed yourself" is ungrammatical because it violates structural constraints on English sentences. Is this a fact about the "psychology" of English speakers, or a fact about some "mind-independent" state of affairs? If it is indeed a fact about the speaker's psychological makeup then is it so in virtue of…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Grammar, English, Psychology
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Uys, P. G. – South African Journal of Higher Education, 2009
This study interrogated the central theoretical statement that understanding and learning to apply the abstract concept of classical dramatic narrative structure can be addressed effectively through a useful audiovisual teaching method. The purpose of the study was to design an effective DVD teaching and learning aid, to justify the design through…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Video Technology, Scripts, Film Study
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Christiansen, Morten H.; MacDonald, Maryellen C. – Language Learning, 2009
Most current approaches to linguistic structure suggest that language is recursive, that recursion is a fundamental property of grammar, and that independent performance constraints limit recursive abilities that would otherwise be infinite. This article presents a usage-based perspective on recursive sentence processing, in which recursion is…
Descriptors: Sentences, Language Processing, Language Usage, Grammar
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Marshall, Chloe R.; van der Lely, Heather K. J. – Language, 2009
Children with specific language impairment (SLI) and dyslexia have phonological deficits that are claimed to cause their language and literacy impairments and to be responsible for the overlap between the two disorders. Little is known, however, about the phonological grammar of children with SLI and dyslexia, and indeed whether they show…
Descriptors: Phonology, Dyslexia, Language Impairments, Children
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Hayes, Bruce; Zuraw, Kie; Siptar, Peter; Londe, Zsuzsa – Language, 2009
Phonological constraints can, in principle, be classified according to whether they are natural (founded in principles of universal grammar (UG)) or unnatural (arbitrary, learned inductively from the language data). Recent work has used this distinction as the basis for arguments about the role of UG in learning. Some languages have phonological…
Descriptors: Vowels, Phonology, Native Speakers, Language Universals
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Fagan, Mary K. – Journal of Child Language, 2009
This study measured longitudinal change in six parameters of infant utterances (i.e. number of sounds, CV syllables, supraglottal consonants, and repetitions per utterance, temporal duration, and seconds per sound), investigated previously unexplored characteristics of repetition (i.e. number of vowel and CV syllable repetitions per utterance) and…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Grammar, Longitudinal Studies
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Serratrice, Ludovica; Sorace, Antonella; Filiaci, Francesca; Baldo, Michela – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2009
A number of recent studies have argued that bilingual children's language comprehension and production may be affected by cross-linguistic influence. The overall aim of this study was to investigate whether the ability to judge the grammaticality of a construction in one language is affected by knowledge of the corresponding construction in the…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Children, English, Italian
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Lardiere, Donna – Second Language Research, 2009
In this article, Lardiere responds to peer comments regarding her earlier article "Some Thoughts on the Contrastive Analysis of Features in Second Language Acquisition" (EJ831786). Lardiere acknowledges the reviewers' thoughtful contributions and expert expansion on various facets of the original article. While she states that it is clear from the…
Descriptors: Language Research, Contrastive Linguistics, Second Language Learning, Morphology (Languages)
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Kaji, Shigeki – Language Sciences, 2009
This paper explores the interaction of tone and syntax in Rutooro, a Bantu language of Western Uganda. Rutooro has lost its lexical tone but retains a phrasally defined high pitch that appears on the penultimate syllable--the default position in Bantu. This high pitch can work grammatically and in fact distinguishes between the noun phrase vs.…
Descriptors: African Languages, Syllables, Nouns, Syntax
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Carter, Shannon – College Composition and Communication, 2009
Scholarship on writing centers often relies on validation systems that reconcile tensions between equality and plurality by privileging one over the other. According to feminist political theorist Chantal Mouffe, neither absolute equality nor absolute plurality are possible in any democratic system, a conflict she calls "the democratic paradox"…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Goal Orientation
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