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Browne, Janet P.; Chapman, Mary Ann G. Gerwig – Maryland English Journal, 1997
Describes, in "Videotapes Can Provide a Bridge to Language Development and Literacy," how quality videotapes can help develop students' language skills in elementary classrooms. Describes, in "Contracting for Success," how a written contract can help students work together in group projects. Gives a sample contract. (PA)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Elementary Education, Group Activities, Higher Education
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Dykstra, Pamela D. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1997
Considers why basic writers write in "phrases patched upon phrases." Examines how language is patterned and acquired to clarify a framework for teaching basic writers. States that speaking and writing, two different ways of organizing and presenting information, have different structures. Explores what cognitive psychology can say about…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Cognitive Psychology, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns
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Roberts, Julie – Language Variation and Change, 1997
Examines the acquisition of new sound changes by 3- and 4-year-old children in asymmetrical child care situations. Results reveal that the children had acquired the changes and emphasize that the dialect transmission period begins before the age of maximal peer group influence. The findings support the possibility that child care asymmetry affects…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Change Agents, Child Language, Dialect Studies
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Harris, Paul L.; Jones, David P. H. – Child Abuse & Neglect: The International Journal, 1997
Critiques an article cautioning that children may perform poorly when questioned by professionals about emotional or painful events. Asserts that young children have the vocabulary to report feelings of distress or anger, even if they sometimes fail to make use of that vocabulary in particular contexts. (CR)
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Communication Skills, Interpersonal Communication, Language Acquisition
Harris, Sharon; And Others – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1996
Joint attention and topic initiation in caregiver-child interactions were explored in relation to language gains of 28 children with Down syndrome (DS) and 17 typical children. DS caregivers spent more time in joint attention than controls. Receptive language gains were associated with caregivers maintaining attention to child-selected toys and…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Caregiver Child Relationship, Child Caregivers, Downs Syndrome
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Wilkinson, Krista M.; And Others – Developmental Review, 1996
Notes that psycholinguists have studied "fast mapping," and behavior analysts have studied the phenomenon of"learning by exclusion." Reviews the research protocols, questions, and outcomes of these two research lines to show their clear similarities, to support the argument that both disciplines are studying a single…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Lynch, Michael P. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1996
Reports on the continuing study of a congenitally acochlear child using an analytical focus on the prelinguistic vocalizations involving the description of syllable groupings within a prosodic hierarchy. Results indicate that audition is not necessary for the formation of prelinguistic phrasing, but hearing does influence certain aspects of…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Audiotape Recordings, Auditory Stimuli, Child Language
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Kehoe, Margaret M.; Conxita, Lleo – Journal of Child Language, 2003
Studies of vowel length acquisition indicate an initial stage in which phonological vowel length is random followed by a stage in which either long vowels or short vowels and codas are produced. To determine whether this sequence of acquisition applies to a group of German-speaking children, monosyllabic and disyllabic words are transcribed and…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, English (Second Language), German, Language Acquisition
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Tomasello, Michael; Akhtar, Nameera – Cognition, 2003
Presents evidence that the supposed paradox in which infants find abstract patterns in speech-like stimuli whereas even some preschoolers struggle to find abstract syntactic patterns within meaningful language is no paradox. Asserts that all research evidence shows that young children's syntactic constructions become abstract in a piecemeal…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Development, Comprehension, Developmental Stages
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Naigles, Letitia R. – Cognition, 2003
Asserts that the posited paradox between infancy and toddlerhood language was not eliminated by Tomasello and Akhtar's appeal to infants' robust statistical learning abilities. Maintains that scrutiny of their studies supports the resolution that abstracting linguistic form is easy for infants and that toddlers find it difficult to integrate…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Development, Comprehension, Developmental Stages
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Duncan, Robert M.; Tarulli, Donato – Early Education and Development, 2003
Discusses ideas from Vygotsky, Leont'ev and Bakhtin to show how fantasy play acts as its own zone of proximal development that contributes to the development of symbolic mediation, the appropriation of social roles and symbols, and the preschool child's preparation for elementary school. (JPB)
Descriptors: Child Role, Cognitive Development, Educational Theories, Language Acquisition
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Nott, Pauline; Cowan, Robert; Brown, P. Margaret; Cowan, Robert – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2003
The validity of the Diary of Early Language (Di-EL), a parent report technique, was evaluated with nine children with profound hearing loss using cochlear implants or hearing aids. Lexical data, reported by parents using the Di-EL, agreed with results of the Mac Arthur Communicative Development Inventories and the Rossetti Infant Toddler Language…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cochlear Implants, Deafness, Early Childhood Education
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Grela, Bernard G. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2003
The language transcripts of seven children with Down syndrome (DS) and seven typically developing children with comparable mean length of utterance levels were compared for verb argument structure. Findings suggest that syntactic difficulties may delay children with DS in overcoming the optional subject phenomena and the lesser number of anomalous…
Descriptors: Child Development, Down Syndrome, Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education
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Nelson, Keith E.; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1996
This study compared relative effectiveness of imitative treatment and conversational recast treatment in 7 children (ages 55-79 months) with language impairment and 7 controls. Target acquisition was faster under conversational recast treatment for both groups. Language-impaired children learned grammatical structures as efficiently as…
Descriptors: Children, Connected Discourse, Developmental Stages, Grammar
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Stromer, Robert; And Others – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1996
This review of research discusses how children with autism may acquire equivalence classes after learning to supply a common oral name to each stimulus in a potential class. A proposed methodology for researching referent naming and class formation, analysis of stimulus classes, and generalization is offered. (CR)
Descriptors: Autism, Behavioral Science Research, Classification, Cognitive Processes
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