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Peer reviewedHewitt, Roger; Inghilleri, Moira – Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1993
Explores developments in the United Kingdom with regard to the recent endorsement in the national curriculum of the importance of speaking and listening skills (oracy). Observations in six inner-city London schools reflect ambiguities in policy and practice. The results of an oracy policy regarding assessment are still unclear. (SLD)
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Class Activities, Classroom Research, Educational Assessment
Peer reviewedMusselman, Carol; Kircaali-Iftar, Gonul – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 1996
This study compared 20 young deaf children with either exceptionally good or exceptionally poor spoken language for their hearing loss, age, and intelligence. Factors associated with high performance included earlier use of binaural ear-level aids, better educated mothers, auditory/verbal or auditory/oral instruction, reliance on spoken language…
Descriptors: Deafness, Early Childhood Education, Educational Background, Family Environment
Pica, Teresa – IRAL, 1996
Examines whether negotiation addresses the need of second- language (L2) learners to focus attention on L2 form. The study analyzed the utterances of negotiation produced as 20 English native speaker-nonnative speaker (NS-NNS) dyads engaged in communication tasks. Negotiation assisted the NNS needs for data on features that were possible in the…
Descriptors: College Students, Data Analysis, Data Collection, English (Second Language)
Peer reviewedCanady, Claudia J.; Krantz, Susan G. – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 1996
Interviews were conducted with 142 above-average readers and 128 below-average readers in the fourth grade. In contrast to poor readers, good readers reported understanding what they read, talking more, being understood more often, and reading more frequently at home and for fun. No differences existed between groups in opinions of the value and…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Grade 4, Intermediate Grades, Interpersonal Communication
Peer reviewedBaggett, H. Lane; And Others – Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1996
Appraisal, coping, task performance, and cardiovascular responses were examined among men high and low in speech anxiety who prepared and performed a speech under evaluative conditions. Speech-anxious men saw the task as more threatening. They were more stressed, anxious, distracted, and aware of their emotions, focused on the passage of time, and…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Cardiovascular System, Communication (Thought Transfer), Communication Apprehension
Peer reviewedFrancisco, Bridget L.; Torgerson, John – Tribal College, 1999
Verifies observations made of the American Indian population, who appear to demonstrate a high incidence of chronic hoarseness. Examines hoarseness in the general population, American Indian communication styles, causes of Indian voice disorders, study methods, and study results. Speculates that one possibility for the hoarseness is the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Articulation Impairments, Child Development, Children
Light, Richard – Quest, 2003
The "discursive turn" in the social sciences points to the potential in Teaching Games for Understanding pedagogy (TGfU) as a means of providing a holistic learning experience for students and a platform from which to reposition physical education among institutional forces that define boundaries between academic disciplines in the school…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Holistic Approach, Learning Experience, Educational Games
Clark, Herbert H.; Krych, Meredyth A. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
Speakers monitor their own speech and, when they discover problems, make repairs. In the proposal examined here, speakers also monitor addressees for understanding and, when necessary, alter their utterances in progress. Addressees cooperate by displaying and signaling their understanding in progress. Pairs of participants were videotaped as a…
Descriptors: Models, Speech Communication, Literary Devices, Language Processing
Fawcett, Angela; Nicolson, Rod – Electronic Journal of Research in Educational Psychology, 2004
Introduction: In this review article we outline the thinking and evidence behind our hypothesis that the problems suffered by dyslexic people may be attributable to cerebellar deficit. Method: Firstly, we provide an overview of recent evidence that proposes a central role for the cerebellum in cognitive skills, in particular those scaffolded by…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Oral Language, Dyslexia, Brain
Godwin-Jones, Robert – Language Learning & Technology, 2005
This article describes two emerging technologies--Skype and podcasting. Both Skype and podcasting can be considered "disruptive technologies" in that they allow for new and different ways of doing familiar tasks, and in the process, may threaten traditional industries. Skype, the "people's telephone," is a free, Internet-based alternative to…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Telephone Communications Industry, Competition, Telecommunications
Guo, Yan – Canadian Journal of University Continuing Education, 2005
Peer evaluation has been criticized as a threat to academic freedom and has been used, usually erroneously, as a justification for academic reappointment, tenure promotion, and merit pay. In recent years, scholars have recommended that peer consultation, which is primarily designed to improve teaching, be honored, but apart from evaluation. In…
Descriptors: Merit Pay, Speech Communication, Academic Freedom, Peer Evaluation
Krahmer, Emiel; Swerts, Marc – Language and Speech, 2005
We describe two experiments on signaling and detecting uncertainty in audiovisual speech by adults and children. In the first study, utterances from adult speakers and child speakers (aged 7-8) were elicited and annotated with a set of six audiovisual features. It was found that when adult speakers were uncertain they were more likely to produce…
Descriptors: Cues, Young Children, Adults, Foreign Countries
Netten, Joan; Germain, Claude – Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics / Revue canadienne de linguistique appliquee, 2005
Through research and classroom observation undertaken while conceptualizing and implementing the Intensive French program in Canada, many new insights were gained into the development of communication skills in a classroom situation. Five lessons learned about the development of spontaneous oral communication are presented in this article: the…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Observation, Second Language Learning, Foreign Countries
Ostheimer, Martha W.; White, Edward M. – Assessing Writing, 2005
Estimates indicate that as much as 80% of an engineer's work time is spent on communicating. Studies done by the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) at the University of Arizona show that engineering firms, as well as ECE graduates, rank writing ability as the most important skill in determining engineers' success, even above…
Descriptors: Portfolios (Background Materials), Engineering Education, Speech Communication, Portfolio Assessment
Prendiville, Francis; Toye, Nigel – Paul Chapman Publishing, 2007
Showing teachers how to use drama to promote speaking and listening for pupils, including those who find learning difficult, this book describes, analyses and teaches how to use role play effectively and looks at how to generate a productive dialogue between teachers and pupils that is both powerful and enabling. The authors present innovative…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Role, Elementary School Students, Speech Communication

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