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Chan, Yen-Ling; Marinellie, Sally A. – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2008
The purpose of this study was to expand the current literature on word definitions by focusing on definitions of idioms provided by several age groups. Preadolescents, young adolescents, older adolescents, and adults wrote definitions for 10 frequently used idioms and also rated their familiarity with the idiomatic expressions. Participants'…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Definitions, Figurative Language, Familiarity
Perales, Jose C.; Shanks, David R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
It has been proposed that causal power (defined as the probability with which a candidate cause would produce an effect in the absence of any other background causes) can be intuitively computed from cause-effect covariation information. Estimation of power is assumed to require a special type of counterfactual probe question, worded to remove…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Probability, Cognitive Mapping, Knowledge Representation
Climie, Emma A.; Pexman, Penny M. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2008
We investigated how children solve the interpretive problem of verbal irony. Children 5 to 8 years of age and a group of adults were presented with ironic and literal remarks in the context of short puppet shows. The speaker puppet's personality was manipulated as a cue to intent; that is, speakers were described as funny or serious. We measured…
Descriptors: Puppetry, Nonverbal Communication, Figurative Language, Human Body
Bialostok, Steve – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2008
This research presents an empirical study on metaphor based on numerous interviews with parents of young children. Contemporary metaphor theory is complemented by a well-articulated place for culture and the role metaphor plays in cultural understanding. I demonstrate that 1) parents understand learning to read as the acquisition of reading…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Cultural Awareness, Reading Skills, Cultural Influences
Eilertsen, Tor-Vidar; Gustafson, Niklas; Salo, Petri – Educational Action Research, 2008
This paper is based on the assumption that action research always affects the micropolitical balance characteristic of a certain school setting. The authors claim that micropolitics, that is the patterns of formal power and informal influence, has largely been neglected in the literature on action research in schools. This means that action…
Descriptors: Action Research, Research Projects, Foreign Countries, Researchers
Kofoed, Jette – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2008
This analysis concentrates on the case of a child, Jenny. The paper suggests that the concept of liminality may hold the key to an understanding of muted subject positions like the one assumed by Jenny in a school class. Liminality is proposed as a way of conceptualizing transitions where the subject in question transgresses established rules and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adjustment (to Environment), Alienation, Grade 6
Gobbo, Francesca – Intercultural Education, 2008
This article aims to clarify and discuss the reasons and limits of three rather popular metaphors that are used to speak of today's complex social and cultural fabric, through references to cultural anthropology, biology and genetics. In her analysis, the author considers not only the linguistic and semantic dimension of each metaphor, but also…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Semantics, Figurative Language, Acculturation
Beck, Sarah R.; Robinson, Elizabeth J.; Freeth, Megan M. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2008
In two experiments, we examined young children's ability to delay a response to ambiguous input. In Experiment 1, 5- and 6-year-olds performed as poorly when they needed to choose between basing an interpretation on ambiguous input and delaying an interpretation as when making explicit evaluations of knowledge, whereas 7- and 8-year-olds found the…
Descriptors: Young Children, Experimental Psychology, Decision Making Skills, Experiments
Peleg, Orna; Eviatar, Zohar – Brain and Language, 2008
The present study examined the manner in which both hemispheres utilize prior semantic context and relative meaning frequency during the processing of homographs. Participants read sentences biased toward the dominant or the subordinate meaning of their final homograph, or unbiased neutral sentences, and performed a lexical decision task on…
Descriptors: Sentences, Semantics, Figurative Language, Language Processing
Geldard, Kathryn; Foo, Rebecca Yin; Shakespeare-Finch, Jane – Australian Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 2009
Counselling children often requires the use of supplementary strategies in order to interest and engage the child in the therapeutic process. One such strategy is the Metaphorical Fruit Tree (MFT); an art metaphor suited to exploring and developing self-concept. Quantitative and qualitative data was used to explore the relationships between…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, Children, Figurative Language, Self Concept
Lewis, Tyson E. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2009
In this paper I chart the origins of modern day "biopedagogy" through an analysis of two historically specific figures of abnormality: the nervous child and the degenerate. These two figures form the positive (hygienic) and negative (eugenic) surfaces of biopolitics in education, sustained and articulated through the category of immunization. By…
Descriptors: Democracy, Mental Health, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories
Zipke, Marcy; Ehri, Linnea C.; Cairns, Helen Smith – Reading Research Quarterly, 2009
An experiment examined whether metalinguistic awareness involving the detection of semantic ambiguity can be taught, and whether this instruction improves students' reading comprehension. Lower SES third graders from a variety of cultural backgrounds (M = 8 yr. 7 mo., N = 46) were randomly assigned to treatment and control groups. Those receiving…
Descriptors: Grade 3, Elementary School Students, Metalinguistics, Semantics
Klabbers, Jan H. G. – Simulation & Gaming, 2009
Since its introduction in academia and professional practice during the 1950s, gaming has been linked to simulation. Although both fields have a few important characteristics in common, they are distinct in their form and underlying theories of knowledge and methodology. Nevertheless, in the literature, hybrid terms such as "gaming/simulation" and…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Figurative Language, Simulation, Definitions
Pramling, Niklas – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2009
In this article, some findings from a study of teachers introducing poetry-making to children in the early years (children two to eight years-old) are reported. Empirical examples are analysed in terms of the poetic aspects that come into play when trying to construct poems and the challenges this presents to the children. Finally, some…
Descriptors: Poetry, Teaching Methods, Young Children, Elementary School Students
Galewski, Elizabeth – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2007
This tropological analysis of "On the Equality of the Sexes" (1790) argues that Judith Sargent Murray deployed a series of ironic reversals, including an example of Kenneth Burke's "dialectical" irony, to make her famous case for women's capacity to reason. As such, the article elucidates this trope's peculiar rhetorical potential within the…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Rhetoric, Womens Education, Educational Change

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