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Asher, Steven R. – 1978
In a consideration of the development of referential communication performance, this paper describes three broad capacities that appear to underlie successful performance: the speaker's ability to analyze the persepective of the listener and formulate a message with this perspective in mind, the child's ability to meet the information processing…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Communication Skills, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Hall, William S.; Tirre, William C. – 1979
The research reported here focuses on one aspect of the communicative environment, namely vocabulary. The central question motivating this research was whether there are social class and ethnic group differences in the vocabulary used in the home and in the school situation. A corpus of talk was searched for the use of words from four standardized…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Classroom Environment, Cultural Influences
Hoar, Nancy – 1978
The middle childhood years are a period of refinement of the semantics and syntax acquired in the early years, of substantial metalinguistic development, and of subtle changes in actual processing strategies. In a study undertaken to determine how these three factors interact, children aged 6 to 11 were asked to produce and recognize paraphrases.…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition
Farwell, Carol B. – 1976
Production data from a longitudinal study of seven children in their first attempts to produce words containing fricatives are presented to illustrate how children use four distinct strategies to approach this relatively difficult class of sounds. The strategies are: (1) favorite sounds--an approach used by a subject who seemed to enjoy playing…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Skull, John – 1979
The function of speech and its implications for studying, understanding, and promoting language development are explored in this paper. Function is considered to be the purpose of the speaker when speaking, variously termed context of situation, situation, context, circumstance, or mode. It is noted that very few studies of speech and speech…
Descriptors: Child Language, Communication (Thought Transfer), Educational Research, Elementary Education
Low, Anni – 1980
In an effort to comply with bilingual instruction requirements, school districts throughout California will soon be involved in testing vast numbers of children to determine language proficiency and language dominance. Many language tests will require a child to repeat a sentence or a phrase in exactly the same manner that is stated by an examiner…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Child Language, Comprehension, Dialects
London, Charlotte I. – 1979
Mainstreaming students means moving them out of segregated learning environments in special education classes and integrating them into regular classes with "normal" children. Mainstreaming also has relevance to gifted children. Both gifted and handicapped students are searching for meaning, for which the primary source is language. The main…
Descriptors: Child Language, Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction
O'Connell, Joanne Curry; Farran, Dale C. – 1980
This study supports the claim that environmental factors in early intervention programs can positively affect the development of early communicative behaviors in infants. A sample of 20-month-old infants from low socioeconomic backgrounds and at risk for mental retardation was randomly divided into a day care intervention group and a control…
Descriptors: Child Language, Communication Skills, Communication (Thought Transfer), Day Care
Widerstrom, Anne – 1980
A study was undertaken to explore the relationship of mothers' language to infant development in terms of the infants' development of sensorimotor intelligence. Specifically, the study chronicled the infants' advances in sensorimotor development from J. Piaget's Stage II to Stage III as a possible explanation for changes in maternal language. It…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Stages
Vihman, Marilyn May – 1980
The use of formulaic speech is seen as a learning strategy in children's first language (L1) acquisition to a limited extent, and to an even greater extent in their second language (L2) acquisition. While the first utterances of the child learning L1 are mostly one-word constructions, many of them are routine words or phrases that the child learns…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Style, Error Analysis (Language), Interference (Language)
Prinz, Philip M.; Prinz, Elisabeth A. – 1979
A study was conducted of the language development of a hearing child whose mother was deaf and communicated only in sign and whose father was hearing and communicated in both sign and oral language. Results showed similarities in development between the two modalities as well as similarity between development in two separate modalities and two…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Bilingualism, Child Language, Code Switching (Language)
Hopkins, Carol J. – 1976
This study investigates oral language characteristics of 100 first-grade children to determine the relationship between selected measures of oral language and reading achievement at the end of first grade. Using the Stanford Achievement Test, Reading, the study shows statistically significant, but low, correlations existing between the…
Descriptors: Child Language, Grade 1, Language Acquisition, Language Skills
Steig, Janet B.; Arnold, Marjorie R. – 1978
A study was conducted to test the validity of the Linguistic Features Hypothesis, which predicts that unmarked personal pronouns will be learned first by children, yielding the following order of acquisition: first person before second, followed by third; singular before plural; and subjective case before objective or genitive. A review of the…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Case (Grammar), Child Language, Comprehension
Robertson, J. D. – 1977
This pamphlet is the eighth in a series of ten stemming from the view that language is central to learning, that teachers can gain insights into their work and into learning by examining the language of the classroom, and that current language theory can be the means to such insights. The pamphlet contains a discussion of the uses of language in…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Expressive Language, Fiction
Walsh, Donald D. – The Hawaii Language Teacher, 1966
This essay is addressed to the language student rather than the teacher. Second language learning and its component skills are explained briefly. Techniques of imitation, analogy, analysis, practice, and memorization are described, and speaking, reading, and writing skills are discussed. Suggestions are made for improving reading ability in…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Skills, Learning Experience, Memorization
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