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Pelayo, Jose Maria G., III; Mallari, Shaedy Dee C.; Manio, Joana C.; Pelayo, Jose Juancho S. – Online Submission, 2015
This research study focused on the opinions and contemporary perceptions of Bachelor of Arts in Communication students in Systems Plus College Foundation. The researchers determined the acuity of the students perse on ideal qualities that the respondents should possess or acquire. It addressed with the opinions, insights and also thoughts about…
Descriptors: Student Characteristics, Personality Traits, Self Esteem, College Students
Negron Rivera, German – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Identity has become a major interest for researchers in the areas of linguistic anthropology and sociolinguistics. Recent understandings of identity emphasize its malleability and fluidity. This conceptualization of identities as malleable comes from the realization that speakers relate strategically to propositions and their interlocutors in…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Sociolinguistics, Hearings, Anthropological Linguistics
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Stoel-Gammon, Carol – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2010
Miccio's work included a number of articles on the assessment of phonology in children with phonological disorders, typically using measures of correct articulation, using the PCC, or analyses of errors, using the framework of phonological processes. This paper introduces an approach to assessing phonology by examining the phonetic complexity of…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Delayed Speech, Speech Communication, English
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Vouloumanos, Athena; Hauser, Marc D.; Werker, Janet F.; Martin, Alia – Child Development, 2010
Human neonates prefer listening to speech compared to many nonspeech sounds, suggesting that humans are born with a bias for speech. However, neonates' preference may derive from properties of speech that are not unique but instead are shared with the vocalizations of other species. To test this, thirty neonates and sixteen 3-month-olds were…
Descriptors: Neonates, Primatology, Auditory Stimuli, Speech Communication
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Oosterbaan, Anne E.; van der Schaaf, Marieke F.; Baartman, Liesbeth K. J.; Stokking, Karel M. – International Journal of Educational Research, 2010
This study aims to explore the relationship between the occurrence of reflection (and non-reflection) and thinking activities (e.g., orientating, selecting, analysing) during portfolio-based conversations. Analysis of 21 transcripts of portfolio-based conversations revealed that 20% of the segments were made up of reflection (content reflection…
Descriptors: Portfolios (Background Materials), Speech Communication, Critical Thinking, Reflection
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Eisenberg, Sarita L.; Hitchcock, Elaine R. – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2010
Purpose: This report considered the validity of making conclusions about a child's phonetic inventory (the sounds a child can and cannot produce spontaneously without a prior model or other stimulation) based on the data from standardized single-word tests of articulation or phonology. Method: We evaluated the opportunities for production of…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Vowels, Standardized Tests, Validity
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Roth, Nancy – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2010
The contemporary art college makes a broad range of media available to students, from which writing is conventionally excluded. Writing entered the art college curriculum in the 1960s as a "frame", or means of integrating art and artists into an academic framework, rather than as a medium of potential study. Drawing on the philosophy of Vilem…
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Art Education, Writing Instruction, College Students
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Ryan, Stu – Strategies: A Journal for Physical and Sport Educators, 2010
Speaking and listening are primary modes of communication, and the most common goals of the educational process are to share experiences, exchange ideas, and transmit knowledge. Physical education teachers are constantly searching for strategies that will enrich the educational process. However, the essential process of speaking and listening is…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Speech Communication, Acoustics, Change Strategies
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Berent, Iris; Balaban, Evan; Lennertz, Tracy; Vaknin-Nusbaum, Vered – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2010
Domain-specific systems are hypothetically specialized with respect to the outputs they compute and the inputs they allow (Fodor, 1983). Here, we examine whether these 2 conditions for specialization are dissociable. An initial experiment suggests that English speakers could extend a putatively universal phonological restriction to inputs…
Descriptors: Phonology, Russian, Cognitive Processes, Stimuli
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Metsala, Jamie L.; Chisholm, Gina M. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2010
This study examined effects of lexical status and neighborhood density of constituent syllables on children's nonword repetition and interactions with nonword length. Lexical status of the target syllable impacted repetition accuracy for the longest nonwords. In addition, children made more errors that changed a nonword syllable to a word syllable…
Descriptors: Vocabulary, Syllables, Error Analysis (Language), Children
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Jongmans, Petra; Wempe, Ton G.; van Tinteren, Harm; Hilgers, Frans J. M.; Pols, Louis C. W.; van As-Brooks, Corina J. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2010
Purpose: Confusions between voiced and voiceless plosives and voiced and voiceless fricatives are common in Dutch tracheoesophageal (TE) speech. This study investigates (a) which acoustic measures are found to convey a correct voicing contrast in TE speech and (b) whether different measures are found in TE speech than in normal laryngeal (NL)…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Phonology, Acoustics, Indo European Languages
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Chiat, Shula – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2010
The cross-overs between monolingual-bilingual and typically atypically developing children are a goldmine for research on language development. The four permutations of language exposure and language abilities create "natural experimental conditions" for investigating the nature of the language capacity and how this is shaped by input in typical…
Descriptors: Language Impairments, Monolingualism, Child Development, Language Acquisition
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Nakamura, Ian – ELT Journal, 2010
As we regularly find in exchanges outside the classroom, formulating (the rephrasing of what has been said) makes use of such conversational skills as active listening, elaboration, and affiliation as well as the precise timing of taking turns to keep the talk going. This paper examines how formulations occur in talk outside the classroom…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Classroom Communication, Listening, Teacher Student Relationship
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Brown, Steven; Laird, Angela R.; Pfordresher, Peter Q.; Thelen, Sarah M.; Turkeltaub, Peter; Liotti, Mario – Brain and Cognition, 2009
A sizable literature on the neuroimaging of speech production has reliably shown activations in the orofacial region of the primary motor cortex. These activations have invariably been interpreted as reflecting "mouth" functioning and thus articulation. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to compare an overt speech task with tongue…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Articulation (Speech), Oral Reading, Vowels
Crossley, Scott; McNamara, Danielle – Language Learning & Technology, 2013
This study explores the potential for automated indices related to speech delivery, language use, and topic development to model human judgments of TOEFL speaking proficiency in second language (L2) speech samples. For this study, 244 transcribed TOEFL speech samples taken from 244 L2 learners were analyzed using automated indices taken from…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Language Proficiency, Language Tests, Speech Communication
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