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Lindstromberg, Seth; Boers, Frank – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2008
Knowledge of lexical chunks correlates positively with L2 proficiency. However, high estimates of the number of chunks in natural language have led to scepticism about the feasibility of large-scale chunk-learning on non-intensive, classroom-based courses. Furthermore, few proposals for chunk-teaching have looked beyond the noticing stage. One…
Descriptors: Phonemics, Language Proficiency, Phrase Structure, Second Language Learning
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Morrow, Stephen; Hermsen, Terry – Teaching Artist Journal, 2008
In the late 1970s, poet Lewis MacAdams labeled the many writers beginning to visit schools as "wild cards in the deck of education," bringing fresh possibilities to a somewhat staid curriculum. Now, nearly thirty years later, the authors wonder if it isn't time to renew the metaphor, as everyone strive to name what happens when poets bring their…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Poetry, Student Evaluation
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Hanes, Michael J. – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2008
Suicide is a leading cause of death in jails. This article discusses the use of road drawings as part of a clinical interview by an art therapist to evaluate an inmate's risk for self-harm. Following an overview of suicide in correctional settings, the rationale and procedure for administering road drawings are explained. Examples produced by…
Descriptors: Institutionalized Persons, Figurative Language, Suicide, Art Therapy
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Broderick, Alicia A.; Ne'eman, Ari – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2008
In this paper we explore the significance of metaphor and dominant cultural narratives in current autism discourse. We briefly explore the history of metaphor in autism discourse, and outline the contemporary struggle between the culturally dominant metaphor of autism as disease and the emergent counter-narrative of autism within neurodiversity.…
Descriptors: Autism, Figurative Language, Cultural Influences, Neurological Impairments
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Lopez-Cuadrado, Javier; Armendariz, Ana J.; Latapy, Marion; Lopisteguy, Philippe – Educational Technology & Society, 2008
This paper discusses the communicative potentials of Computerized Adaptive Testing. The study is based on a model that offers a set of independent communicative concepts to describe the Genre of an interactive application. This model will be the starting point to analyze the stages of the interaction cycle that are typically inherent to every…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Test Construction, Models
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Wayne, David – Performance Improvement, 2008
Grounded in the work of W. Edwards Deming, this article describes the basics of systems thinking, viewing a business as a system, and contrasts improving a system with solving a problem. The article uses the human body as a metaphor to describe the various aspects of viewing a business as a system at the concept level and maps the Deming cycle,…
Descriptors: Organizational Effectiveness, Figurative Language, Human Body, Problem Solving
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Mazen, Abdelmagid – Journal of Management Education, 2008
This article integrates behavioral approaches into the teaching and learning of quantitative subjects with application to statistics. Focusing on the emotional component of learning, the article presents a system dynamic model that provides descriptive and prescriptive accounts of learners' anxiety. Metaphors and the metaphorizing process are…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Anxiety, Teaching Methods, Student Attitudes
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Giora, Rachel; Fein, Ofer; Ganzi, Jonathan; Levi, Natalie Alkeslassy; Sabah, Hadas – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2005
Four experiments support the view of negation as mitigation (Giora, Balaban, Fein, & Alkabets, 2004). They show that when irony involves some sizable gap between what is said and what is criticized (He is exceptionally bright said of an idiot), it is rated as highly ironic (Giora, 1995). A negated version of that overstatement (He is not…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Figurative Language, Morphemes
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Rooney, Donna; Solomon, Nicky – Studies in the Education of Adults, 2006
This paper about consumption as a metaphor for learning follows from some ideas about learning and space that emerged from a research project concerned with everyday learning at work. These learning/work spaces have drawn our attention to the significant consumption (eating and drinking) occurring within them. We suggest that linking everyday…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Research Projects
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Jones, L.L.; Estes, Z. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2005
The class-inclusion model claims that metaphors (e.g., That exam is a filter) are comprehended by inclusion of the topic (or subject) as a member of an attributive category named after and exemplified by the vehicle (or predicate). In three experiments, participants rated the extent to which a topic concept (e.g., exam) was a member of a vehicle…
Descriptors: Novels, Classification, Figurative Language
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van Gompel, R.P.G.; Pickering, M.J.; Pearson, J.; Liversedge, S.P. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2005
We report three eye-movement experiments that investigated whether alternative syntactic analyses compete during syntactic ambiguity resolution. Previous research (Traxler, Pickering, & Clifton, 1998; Van Gompel, Pickering, & Traxler, 2001) has shown that globally ambiguous sentences are easier to process than disambiguated sentences, suggesting…
Descriptors: Competition, Sentences, Figurative Language
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Ferreira, V.S.; Slevc, L.R.; Rogers, E.S. – Cognition, 2005
Three experiments assessed how speakers avoid linguistically and nonlinguistically ambiguous expressions. Speakers described target objects (a flying mammal, bat) in contexts including foil objects that caused linguistic (a baseball bat) and nonlinguistic (a larger flying mammal) ambiguity. Speakers sometimes avoided linguistic-ambiguity, and they…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Figurative Language, Animals
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Bennett, Kathy; McGee, Patricia – Open Learning, 2005
This article examines the significance of how learning objects have come to be conceptualized and utilized, particularly in higher education. While many articles critique the term and its origins, an examination of the role metaphor plays in our conceptualization of "data", "information" and "learning objects" helps us move beyond a fixation on…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Course Content
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Hare, Mary; McRae, Ken; Elman, Jeffrey L. – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2004
Linguistic and psycholinguistic research has documented that there exists a close relationship between a verb's meaning and the syntactic structures in which it occurs, and that learners and comprehenders take advantage of this relationship both in acquisition and in processing. We address implications of these facts for issues in structural…
Descriptors: Verbs, Figurative Language, Psycholinguistics
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Ceccarelli, Leah – Written Communication, 2004
This article undertakes a close rhetorical reading of the speeches given by Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, Francis Collins, and Craig Venter on June 26, 2000, at the White House ceremony announcing the completion of the Human Genome Project. Specifically, it looks at the metaphors used by each speaker to describe the activity of genomic scientists.…
Descriptors: Genetics, Figurative Language, Rhetoric
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