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Zaytseva, Victoria; Miralpeix, Imma; Pérez-Vidal, Carmen – Language Learning Journal, 2021
While there is ample evidence that study abroad (SA) enhances oral fluency in a foreign language, the effects of different types of learning context on other aspects of oral skills, such as vocabulary use, have not received much attention in academic research and are less clear. The present study tries to fill this void by investigating lexical…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Oral Language, Form Classes (Languages), Study Abroad
Heron, Marion; Dippold, Doris; Hosein, Anesa; Khan Sullivan, Ameena; Aksit, Tijen; Aksit, Necmi; Doubleday, Jill; McKeown, Kara – Language and Education, 2021
Although participation in academic speaking events is a key to developing disciplinary understanding, students for whom English is a second language may have limited access to these learning events due to an increasingly dialogic and active higher education pedagogy which places considerable demands on their oracy skills. Drawing on the Oracy…
Descriptors: English for Academic Purposes, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
Sarandi, Hedayat – Language Testing, 2015
This study examines elicited imitation (EI) both as a measure of implicit grammatical knowledge and more global semantic and syntactic knowledge. It also examines whether length affects the difficulty of EI tests when they contain both grammatical and ungrammatical items. Fifty language learners took an EI test and an oral narrative task. The data…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Imitation, Grammar
Raftery, Brian; Santos, Jennifer – Journal of Instructional Research, 2015
Based on our own experiences teaching grammar in developmental writing classes and classes not dedicated to writing instruction, along with a history of scholarship that indicates a need for grammar pedagogies (e.g., Dougherty, 2012), instructor-designed grammar games can likely help facilitate learning about these mechanics of writing while…
Descriptors: Grammar, Accuracy, Educational Games, Teaching Methods
Pittman, Von – New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource Development, 2015
The verification of student identity has always been a matter of concern in distance education programs. In short, how could a college know if the person performing the work was the same person receiving the credit? Colleges and universities have approached the problem in a variety of ways. Some have done virtually nothing, while others have begun…
Descriptors: Audits (Verification), Identification, Distance Education, College Students
Lusk, Victoria L.; Zibulsky, Jamie; Viezel, Kathleen – Psychology in the Schools, 2015
A majority of substantiated maltreatment reports are made by educators and thus, teacher knowledge of child maltreatment reporting mandates and reporting behavior has been a focus of research. The knowledge and behavior of school psychologists, however, has not received similar attention. This study investigated the child maltreatment reporting…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Disclosure, School Psychologists, Teacher Behavior
Seixas, T. M.; da Silva, M. A. Salgueiro – Physics Teacher, 2015
When conducting experiments involving the measurement of physically related quantities, choosing an appropriate spacing for the experimental independent variable is a crucial procedure whose consequences may go beyond data graphical visualization. This is particularly true if the measured quantities are nonlinearly related and experimental errors…
Descriptors: Measurement, Data, Error of Measurement, Intervals
Vergauwe, Evie; Cowan, Nelson – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2015
We compared two contrasting hypotheses of how multifeatured objects are stored in visual working memory (vWM); as integrated objects or as independent features. A new procedure was devised to examine vWM representations of several concurrently held objects and their features and our main measure was reaction time (RT), allowing an examination of…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Visual Perception, Reaction Time, Comparative Analysis
Nugent, William Robert; Moore, Matthew; Story, Erin – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2015
The standardized mean difference (SMD) is perhaps the most important meta-analytic effect size. It is typically used to represent the difference between treatment and control population means in treatment efficacy research. It is also used to represent differences between populations with different characteristics, such as persons who are…
Descriptors: Error of Measurement, Error Correction, Predictor Variables, Monte Carlo Methods
Griggs, Richard A. – Teaching of Psychology, 2015
Given the many inaccuracies in the original "New York Times" 38-witnesses version of the Kitty Genovese story, this study examined the accuracy of this story in current introductory psychology textbooks, 50 years later. Recent studies have shown that there is no evidence for the following three key features of the original story: (1)…
Descriptors: Sexual Abuse, Case Studies, Introductory Courses, Psychology
Güner Yildiz, Nevin – Educational Research and Reviews, 2015
This descriptive study examined the attitude of Turkish people towards the mentally retarded. The working group was composed of 329 male and female staff in various places of employment in Eskisehir provincial center, 87 non-working women living in Eskisehir provincial center and 49 non-working women living in Mugla provincial center. Research…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mental Retardation, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Surveys
Ledford, Jennifer R.; Ayres, Kevin M.; Lane, Justin D.; Lam, Man Fung – Journal of Special Education, 2015
Momentary time sampling (MTS), whole interval recording (WIR), and partial interval recording (PIR) are commonly used in applied research. We discuss potential difficulties with analyzing data when these systems are used and present results from a pilot simulation study designed to determine the extent to which these issues are likely to be…
Descriptors: Intervals, Research Methodology, Sampling, Time
McLaughlin, Tara W.; Snyder, Patricia A.; Algina, James – Exceptional Children, 2015
The present study combined a functional abilities approach to characterizing childhood disability with person-oriented analytic techniques to identify and describe functional profiles of young children with disabilities. Nationally representative data from the Pre-Elementary Education Longitudinal Study was used, which included nearly 3,000…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Profiles, Preschool Children, Longitudinal Studies
Murray, Elizabeth; McCabe, Patricia; Ballard, Kirrie J. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2015
Purpose: This randomized controlled trial compared the experimental Rapid Syllable Transition (ReST) treatment to the Nuffield Dyspraxia Programme-Third Edition (NDP3; Williams & Stephens, 2004), used widely in clinical practice in Australia and the United Kingdom. Both programs aim to improve speech motor planning/programming for children…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Speech Impairments, Children, Syllables
McConnell, Meghan M.; St-Onge, Christina; Young, Meredith E. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
Testing has been shown to enhance retention of learned information beyond simple studying, a phenomena known as test-enhanced learning (TEL). Research has shown that TEL effects are greater for tests that require the production of responses [e.g., short-answer questions (SAQs)] relative to tests that require the recognition of correct answers…
Descriptors: Testing, Learning, Multiple Choice Tests, Licensing Examinations (Professions)

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