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Rubin, Janet – 1977
Creative dramatics can be used to teach young children a variety of communication skills. Noisy stories help children to learn and make sounds and later can be used for dramatization purposes. Narrative pantomimes can teach children word order, sensory awareness, and nonverbal communication. Phrases, pictures, and props help stimulate imagination,…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Creative Activities, Creative Dramatics, Dramatic Play
Williams, James D. – 1983
A study investigated the relationship between cognitive style and coherence in discourse. The primary hypothesis was that coherence would vary bimodally by cognitive style classification. Forty-four freshman composition students from three west coast colleges completed the Culture Fair Intelligence Test, the Group Embedded Figures Test, and the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Coherence
Valentine, Kristin; And Others – 1985
Twenty-two interviews were conducted with the owner, managers, employees, suppliers, customers, and competitors of an auto dealership employing 91 people in order to examine the oral traditions of that company. The interviews provided data on management styles, dynamics of the managers' interaction, general language usage, paralanguage, favorable…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Employer Employee Relationship, Field Interviews, Interaction
Moe, Alden J.; Rush, R. Timothy – 1977
This study examined the relationship between the oral language fluency of different socioeconomic status (SES) children entering first grade and their success in learning to read, as measured at the end of the school year. Complete data were obtained from 27 upper, 24 middle, and 23 lower SES level students. Oral language samples were recorded in…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Child Language, Grade 1, Language Skills
Schallert, Diane L.; And Others – 1977
This report reviews evidence that there are differences between oral and written English that lead to differences in the skills and knowledge necessary to comprehend them. Three categories of differences are considered in an attempt to derive specific, testable hypotheses: differences in the physical nature of speech and writing, differences in…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Usage, Language Variation, Listening Comprehension
Smith, Michael D.; Brunette, Diane – 1981
Sound-meaning correspondences produced by an infant were studied under conditions of early rampant homonymy (i.e., production by a very young child of a small set of noncontrastive surface forms or phonetic sequences to refer to objects/events that on the basis of adult standards require the production of numerous contrasting surface forms). The…
Descriptors: Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Infants, Language Acquisition
Perfetti, Charles A. – 1981
The relationship between speech and print is essentially asymmetrical and changes as the reading ability of the child improves. For the child who has succeeded at decoding, the asymmetry implies that commonalities between speech and print are more important than their differences. Three hypothetical observation points illustrate the similarity…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education
Shuy, Roqer W. – 1981
The study of the varieties of language usage in social contexts can made a significant contribution to general welfare if judgments of people's language are unshackled from right-wrong presuppositions and a dispassionate approach is taken to relating their language to the situations they must deal with in the course of their lives. An…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Code Switching (Language), Elementary Education, Language Usage
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McCorkle, Suzanne – 1980
A content analysis was conducted to assess the verbal climate of Saturday morning television programs, the types of verbal aggression that appear in them, and the way verbal responses relate to other program variables. Three content analysis tools were developed and applied to ten half-hour program blocks drawn randomly from the regularly…
Descriptors: Aggression, Characterization, Childhood Attitudes, Childrens Television
Todd-Mancillas, William R. – 1980
Empirical studies that demonstrate probable gender biased perceptions resulting from the use of man-linked words and third-person, singular masculine pronouns are reviewed in this paper. Among the findings revealed by the review are: (1) there is a tendency for people to perceive man-linked words as more likely to refer to men than to women; (2)…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Higher Education, Language Attitudes, Language Research
Vann, Roberta J. – 1979
This summary of the literature on the relationships between oral and written language points out that (1) there is a similarity between first language acquisition and second language learning, and (2) children acquiring English as their first language and English-speaking adults learning a foreign language exhibit similar syntactic maturity. Also…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Language Acquisition, Language Skills, Learning Theories
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Byrne, Brian – 1979
In arguing that language as speech is to be contrasted with language as writing, this paper examines some facts about the evolution of writing systems, draws upon some experimental studies, discusses the difference between speech and writing as being one of status within human cognitive structure, and notes that the difference may help explain why…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Language Acquisition, Linguistics
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Glazer, Susan Mandel; Morrow, Lesley Mandel – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1978
A study assessed and compared the syntax in the oral language of six-, seven-, and eight-year-olds with the syntax in the written language of reading instruction textbooks prepared for children of the same age. (HOD)
Descriptors: Basic Reading, Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Difficulty Level
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Preece, Alison – Journal of Child Language, 1987
Examination of the productive narrative competence of three five-year-olds revealed that the children routinely and regularly produced a striking variety of 14 narrative forms. Seventy percent of the narratives took anecdotal form, and original fantasy narratives occurred only rarely. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Classification, Discourse Analysis, Kindergarten Children
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Rosengrant, Sandra F. – Modern Language Journal, 1987
Evaluation of the Russian oral and written proficiency of third-year university students (N=9) suggested a clear relationship between the students' initial oral proficiency ratings and the grammatical accuracy of their written compositions; the lower a student's oral proficiency rating, the greater the average number of written mistakes, and vice…
Descriptors: College Students, Correlation, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns
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