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Abdel Latif, Muhammad M. Mahmoud – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2012
Since any standards-based reform is made to bring about an improvement in students' learning, it requires changes in teachers' practices as well. This study examined how a standards-based communicative curricular reform in general secondary school English in Egypt has changed teachers' classroom practices, and the factors influencing such…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Measures (Individuals), Foreign Countries, Language Skills
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Pizzioli, Fabrizio; Schelstraete, Marie-Anne – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2008
Purpose: The hypothesis that the linguistic deficit presented by children with specific language impairment (SLI) is caused by limited cognitive resources (e.g., S. Ellis Weismer & L. Hesketh, 1996) was tested against the hypothesis of a limitation in linguistic knowledge (e.g., M. L. Rice, K. Wexler, & P. Cleave, 1995). Method: The study examined…
Descriptors: Children, Language Impairments, Sentences, Morphemes
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Duman, Tuba Yarbay; Aygen, Gulsat; Bastiaanse, Roelien – Brain and Language, 2008
This study presents results from a sentence completion test that examines the production of finite main clauses and non-finite relative clauses in Turkish agrammatic speech. In main clauses, the verb is finite and all its constituents are in their base positions. In relative clauses, the verb is a participle and the NP undergoes overt movement to…
Descriptors: Verbs, Turkish, Grammar, Phrase Structure
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Kielar, A.; Joanisse, Marc F.; Hare, M. L. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
A key question in language processing concerns the rule-like nature of many aspects of grammar. Much research on this topic has focused on English past tense morphology, which comprises a regular, rule-like pattern (e.g., bake-baked) and a set of irregular forms that defy a rule-based description (e.g., take-took). Previous studies have used past…
Descriptors: Semantics, Verbs, Language Processing, Morphemes
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Sun, Yanna – English Language Teaching, 2009
Shakespeare was not known to the Chinese until Lin Zexu's (1785-1850) translation of Hugh Murray's (1789-1845) "Cyclopedia of Geography" (1836). Afterwards Shakespeare in China saw many complicated changes, from being regarded as a story-teller to being fully received as a seasoned playwright and poet, and his plays were rendered into…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Translation
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Shin, Sarah J. – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2009
This paper reports on a part of a year-long investigation into high school ESL students' academic language development. Eight participants were pulled out of their intermediate ESL class for weekly 50-minute sessions with the author for a year. While the main focus of the sessions was reading news magazine articles for meaning, the author…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Sentences, Grammar, English (Second Language)
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Phipps, Simon; Borg, Simon – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2009
This study examines tensions in the grammar teaching beliefs and practices of three practising teachers of English working in Turkey. The teachers were observed and interviewed over a period of 18 months; the observations provided insights into how they taught grammar, while the interviews explored the beliefs underpinning the teachers' classroom…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Teachers, English (Second Language)
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Anderson, Raquel T.; Lockowitz, Alison – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2009
The purpose of this investigation was to identify how Spanish-speaking preschool children with and without specific language impairment (SLI) use the various cues available for ascribing a noun's inherent gender in the language. Via an invented word task, four types of cues were isolated and presented to each child: (1) two types of noun-internal…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Adults, Spanish Speaking, Nouns
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Weingartner, Kristin M.; Klin, Celia M. – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2009
Recent findings (Keysar, 1994; Weingartner & Klin, 2005) have shown that readers are not always accurate at taking a story character's perspective. When readers evaluated a character's understanding of a written message, they mistakenly took into account information that was inaccessible to that character. The results from the three experiments…
Descriptors: Reader Text Relationship, Literary Devices, Perspective Taking, Story Grammar
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Mariscal, Sonia – Journal of Child Language, 2009
Nativist and constructivist accounts differ in their characterization of children's knowledge of grammatical categories. In this paper we present research on the process of acquisition of a particular grammatical system, gender agreement in the Spanish noun phrase, in children under three years of age. The design of the longitudinal study employed…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Nouns, Grammar, Child Language
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Swain, Merrill; Lapkin, Sharon; Knouzi, Ibtissem; Suzuki, Wataru; Brooks, Lindsay – Modern Language Journal, 2009
In this article we explore the process and product of languaging as it concerns the learning of the grammatical concept of voice (active, passive, and middle) in French. We examine and analyze the amount and type of languaging produced by a small sample of university students as they struggle to understand the concept of voice. Students who are…
Descriptors: Grammar, French, College Students, Comparative Analysis
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Conroy, Anastasia; Lidz, Jeffrey; Musolino, Julien – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2009
We demonstrate a U-shaped developmental trajectory in the interpretation of scopally ambiguous sentences, with 4-year-olds and adults, but not 5-year-olds, accessing inverse scope. These results argue against any view that treats 5-year-olds failures as resulting from immaturity of a single mechanism. Instead, we propose that this developmental…
Descriptors: Sentences, Figurative Language, Preschool Children, Adults
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Dekydtspotter, Laurent; Renaud, Claire – Second Language Research, 2009
Lardiere's discussion raises important questions about the use of features in second language (L2) acquisition. This response examines predictions for processing of a feature-valuing model vs. a frequency-sensitive, associative model in explaining the acquisition of French past participle agreement. Results from a reading-time experiment support…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, French, Language Processing, Models
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Erdocia, Kepa; Laka, Itziar; Mestres-Misse, Anna; Rodriguez-Fornells, Antoni – Brain and Language, 2009
In natural languages some syntactic structures are simpler than others. Syntactically complex structures require further computation that is not required by syntactically simple structures. In particular, canonical, basic word order represents the simplest sentence-structure. Natural languages have different canonical word orders, and they vary in…
Descriptors: Sentences, Figurative Language, Language Processing, Syntax
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Duman, Tuba Yarbay; Bastiaanse, Roelien – Brain and Language, 2009
This study tested the production of tensed finite verbs and participles referring to the past and future in agrammatic speakers of Turkish. The agrammatic speakers did not make more time reference errors in tensed verbs than in participles. This is interesting because tense in general cannot therefore be the main problem, since time reference for…
Descriptors: Verbs, Turkish, Neurolinguistics, Aphasia
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