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Peer reviewedRomano, Tom – Educational Leadership, 2004
Students will have to develop a presence on the page along with mastering grammar, spelling, and punctuation in order to become accomplished writers. Students should be given opportunities to hear their own written voices and the written voices of the others, their peers, their teachers and the best authors because the voice helps them to develop…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Grammar, Spelling, Punctuation
Hunt, Tiffany J.; Hunt, Bud – English Journal, 2004
A researcher and teacher explain the reasons for the employment of isolated grammar lessons. A well-planned and informed approach for teaching the conventions will cover the skills while empowering students.
Descriptors: Grammar, English Curriculum, Teaching Methods, Student Empowerment
Gribbin, Bill – English Journal, 2005
A persistent question throughout the years is to teach grammar or not to teach, along with how much to teach and when. Very few teachers exactly teach grammar and few students know what grammar is. The myth of English teacher as judge of grammatical correctness that forces two reactions, one cynical and other more predictable are discussed.
Descriptors: English Teachers, Grammar, English Instruction, Teaching Methods
Heller, Isabel – Computer Assisted Language Learning, 2005
The way people interact with knowledge has changed tremendously for today's society, in that the skills of information-management are required more than those for the retention of knowledge. This "knowledge society" (Ruschoff, in Mibler & Multhaup, 1999, p. 80) thus greatly supports the implementation of technology in the education sector due to…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, Placement, Grammar, English (Second Language)
Heller, Isabel – Computer Assisted Language Learning, 2005
The way people interact with knowledge has changed tremendously for today's society, in that the skills of information-management are required more than those for the retention of knowledge. This "knowledge society" (Ruschoff, in Mibler & Multhaup, 1999, p. 80) thus greatly supports the implementation of technology in the education sector due to…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, Placement, Grammar, English (Second Language)
Duffield, Nigel – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
Ever since the derivational theory of complexity (DTC) apparently bit the dust in the late 1960s, experimental psycholinguistics have been afflicted by a dualism at least as troublesome as the mind/brain dichotomy, namely, the grammar/parser distinction. The idea that mentally represented grammar is something fully dissociated from the human…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Linguistic Theory, Grammar, Language Processing
Staub, Adrian; Clifton, Charles, Jr.; Frazier, Lyn – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
Two eye movement experiments explored the roles of verbal subcategorization possibilities and transitivity biases in the processing of heavy NP shift sentences in which the verb's direct object appears to the right of a post-verbal phrase. In Experiment 1, participants read sentences in which a prepositional phrase immediately followed the verb,…
Descriptors: Verbs, Sentences, Eye Movements, Language Processing
Kirk, Cecilia; Demuth, Katherine – Journal of Child Language, 2005
Effects of negative input for 13 categories of grammatical error were assessed in a longitudinal study of naturalistic adult-child discourse. Two-hour samples of conversational interaction were obtained at two points in time, separated by a lag of 12 weeks, for 12 children (mean age 2;0 at the start). The data were interpreted within the framework…
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Acquisition, Phonemes, Longitudinal Studies
Theakston, Anna L.; Lieven, Elena V. M. – Journal of Child Language, 2005
Auxiliary syntax is recognized to be one of the more complex aspects of language that children must acquire. However, there is much disagreement among researchers concerning children's early understanding of auxiliaries, with some researchers advocating a relatively abstract grammar as the basis for auxiliary syntax, while others view the…
Descriptors: Syntax, Researchers, English, Language Acquisition
Slabakova, Roumyana – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2005
Two major mechanisms of encoding telicity across languages are either marking the object as exhaustively countable or measurable, or utilizing a specific prefix on the verbal form. English predominantly uses the first mechanism, while Russian mostly utilizes the second. The learning task of an English speaker acquiring Russian, then, is two-fold:…
Descriptors: Semantics, Form Classes (Languages), Grammar, Russian
Bullock, Barbara E.; Gerfen, Chip – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2005
The phonological system of the French of Frenchville, Pennsylvania (USA) demonstrates a dramatic case of transfer in the latest (and last) generation of bilingual French-English speakers: the mid front round vowels, [ligature of o and e] and [slashed o], have often been replaced by the English rhoticized schwa as found in the word "sir."…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Vowels, Phonetic Analysis, French
Lee, Ming-Wei – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2004
The gap/gapless processing debate in the psycholinguistics literature contrasts two processing models: one that assumes the trace-based Government and Binding (or Principles and Parameters) Grammar and the (augmented) Active Filler Strategy and one that assumes the traceless Dependency Categorial Grammar and the Principle of Dependency Formation.…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Language Processing, Grammar, Sentences
Shak, Juliana; Gardner, Sheena – Language Teaching Research, 2008
Recent studies suggest that focus-on-form (FonF) instruction has a positive effect on the second language proficiency of young learners. However, few have looked at learner perspectives on different FonF tasks, particularly in those young learners. This study investigates children's attitudes towards four FonF task-types in three Primary 5 English…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Language Proficiency, Grammar
Vasishth, Shravan; Brussow, Sven; Lewis, Richard L.; Drenhaus, Heiner – Cognitive Science, 2008
A central question in online human sentence comprehension is, "How are linguistic relations established between different parts of a sentence?" Previous work has shown that this dependency resolution process can be computationally expensive, but the underlying reasons for this are still unclear. This article argues that dependency…
Descriptors: Sentences, Stimuli, Short Term Memory, Information Retrieval
Sabourin, Laura; Stowe, Laurie A. – Second Language Research, 2008
In this article we investigate the effects of first language (L1) on second language (L2) neural processing for two grammatical constructions (verbal domain dependency and grammatical gender), focusing on the event-related potential P600 effect, which has been found in both L1 and L2 processing. Native Dutch speakers showed a P600 effect for both…
Descriptors: Grammar, Second Languages, Language Processing, Romance Languages

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