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Peer reviewedHughes, Maureen; Westgate, David – Language and Education, 1998
Focuses on whether teachers' enabling styles in talking with young pupils depends on supportive strategies on teacher's part or whether any more specific teacher discourse-moves can be identified as productive. Analyzes one extended recording in which the teacher talks with a group of 5-year olds for approximately 30 minutes. Conclusions are drawn…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis
Peer reviewedMcCaffrey, Helen A.; Davis, Barbara L.; MacNeilage, Peter F.; von Hapsburg, Deborah – Volta Review, 1999
A case study of a child who was stimulated with a cochlear implant at age 25 months is reported. Postimplantation, nasals decreased and other consonant types increased, particularly alveolars. The vowel space expanded, including increased production of diphthongs. Serial organization of speech postimplantation mirrored basic motor propensities in…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cochlear Implants, Consonants, Deafness
Peer reviewedRescorla, Leslie – Annals of Dyslexia, 2000
Language and reading outcomes at age 13 were examined in 22 children who were late talkers as toddlers. Compared to 14 controls, children who were late talkers had significantly poorer vocabulary, grammar, reading/spelling, and verbal memory skills, although they performed in the average range on most language and academic tasks. (Contains…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Followup Studies, Grammar, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedCulbertson, William R.; Tanner, Dennis C. – Infant-Toddler Intervention: The Transdisciplinary Journal, 2001
This article compares and contrasts the two major psycholinguistic philosophies of speech development, the traditional and the phonological approaches. The traditional approach is seen as most useful for children whose speech is only mildly impaired or who need oral sensorimotor stimulation. For severely unintelligible speech, the phonological…
Descriptors: Articulation Impairments, Child Development, Language Acquisition, Phonemes
Peer reviewedGoldstein, Brian A.; Iglesias, Aquiles – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 1996
This study used quantitative and qualitative methodology to examine the phonological patterns of 24 3-year-old and 30 4-year-old Spanish-speaking preschoolers of Puerto Rican descent. The children acquired the sounds of their language at an early age and did not exhibit high percentages of occurrence on targeted phonological processes. (DB)
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Dialects, Hispanic Americans, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedBertolo, Stefano – Language Acquisition, 1995
Presents a framework for studying the effects of the Maturation Hypothesis on the problem of language learning, parametrically conceived, and offers a method for finding all existing maturational solutions for any parametric hypothesis space and any learning algorithm that differs from Gibson and Wexler's Triggering Learning Algorithm. (27…
Descriptors: Algorithms, Child Language, Computational Linguistics, Data Analysis
Peer reviewedBehl-Chadha, Gundeep – Cognition, 1996
Examined three- to four-month-old infants' ability to form perceptually based categorical representation in the domains of natural kinds and artifacts. By showing the availability of perceptually driven basic and superordinate-like representations in early infancy that closely correspond to adult conceptual categories, findings underscored the…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures
Peer reviewedSmith, Linda B.; And Others – Cognition, 1996
Examined three-year-old children's ability to generalize novel words to new instances. Suggested that children's similarity judgments and feature selection in name generalization are guided by nonstrategic attentional processes that are minimally influenced by new conceptual information. Proposed that these findings may explain the extraordinary…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Generalization
Peer reviewedBohannon, John Neil, III; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1996
Examines the research of Morgan, Bonamo, and Travis (1995) to detect the effects of recasted error correction on children's emerging grammar. Notes that regression procedures used by Morgan and others could not discriminate between the data generated by models in which recasts totally determined grammatical learning, supplemented other learning,…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Error Correction, Grammar, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedMorgan, James L. – Developmental Psychology, 1996
The failure of Bohannon, Padgett, Nelson, and Mark's (1996) time-series analysis to distinguish among varying models of recast function is shown to be attributable to confounding of parameters and idiosyncratic assumptions adopted in generating simulated data from these models. (MDM)
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Error Correction, Grammar, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedJuffs, Alan – Second Language Research, 1998
Explores effects of first-language verb-argument structure on English-as-a-Second-Language processing. Native Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Romance language speakers (all advanced English speakers) provided word-by-word reading times and gramaticality judgment data in self-paced reading tasks. Results suggest that reliable differences in parsing…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Grammar, Language Acquisition, Language Proficiency
Peer reviewedJambunathan, Saigeetha; Norris, Janet A. – Child Study Journal, 2000
Examined the relation between language competence and self-competence among 3-4 year olds, using the Preschool Language Assessment Inventory. Found that children's perception of self-competence is influenced by their language competence. The finding that linguistically complex items may not be completely understood by children with low-average…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Competence, Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Language Proficiency
Peer reviewedCrowe, Linda K. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2000
A study examined the reading behaviors of five mothers and their preschool children with language impairment across three storybook readings. Four of the children pointed to, answered questions about, and labeled and commented on the pictures. Three of the children increased reading behaviors and reading time across the three readings. (Contains…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Language Acquisition, Language Impairments, Mothers
Peer reviewedFrancis, Norbert – Bilingual Research Journal, 1999
Examines the possible role of maturational constraints on first language acquisition and second language learning. Reviews research on the special circumstances of delayed first language acquisition and the effects of age on second language learning. Suggests that ability to attain native-speaker grammatical competence may diminish long before…
Descriptors: Age, Biological Influences, Developmental Stages, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedCarr, Deborah; Felce, David – Journal of Intellectual and Developmental Disability, 2000
This article discusses the potential of applying research based on the principles of stimulus equivalence and related phenomena to the investigation and remediation of language disabilities, particularly with individuals with intellectual disabilities and autism. It describes studies which have applied an equivalence framework to different aspects…
Descriptors: Adults, Autism, Children, Expressive Language


