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Schaetzel, Kirsten; Low, Ee Ling – Center for Adult English Language Acquisition, 2009
Adult English language learners in the United States approach the learning of English pronunciation from a wide variety of native language backgrounds. They may speak languages with sound systems that vary a great deal from that of English. The pronunciation goals and needs of adult English language learners are diverse. These goals and needs…
Descriptors: Pronunciation, Pronunciation Instruction, Administrators, Adult Learning
Weber, Rose-Marie – Reading Teacher, 2008
Direct quotation can be a source of meaning in storybook texts for beginning readers. The author of this article sketches the linguistic complexity of direct quotation and offers instructional strategies. Three aspects of direct quotation are examined: the cluster of print features and syntactic characteristics that direct quotation involves, the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Oral Reading, Semantics, Text Structure
Corriveau, Kathleen; Pasquini, Elizabeth; Goswami, Usha – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2007
Purpose: To explore the sensitivity of children with specific language impairment (SLI) to amplitude-modulated and durational cues that are important for perceiving suprasegmental speech rhythm and stress patterns. Method: Sixty-three children between 7 and 11 years of age were tested, 21 of whom had a diagnosis of SLI, 21 of whom were matched for…
Descriptors: Cues, Age, Suprasegmentals, Language Impairments
Nazzi, Thierry; Iakimova, Galina; Bertoncini, Josiane; Fredonie, Severine; Alcantara, Carmela – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
Four experiments explored French-learning infants' ability to segment words from fluent speech. The focus was on bisyllabic words to investigate whether infants segment them as whole words or segment each syllable individually. No segmentation effects were found in 8-month-olds. Twelve-month-olds segmented individually both the final syllables…
Descriptors: Syllables, French, Infants, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedCurtis, David – Language Arts, 1975
Tracing the history of well known nursery rhymes can be a stimulating means of introducing children to poetry.
Descriptors: Elementary Education, English Instruction, History, Language Rhythm
Peer reviewedLehiste, Ilse – Journal of Phonetics, 1977
This article makes two points: (1) that isochrony, the rhythmic organization of speech into more or less equal intervals, is primarily a perceptual phenomenon; and (2) that there exists a way in which isochrony is integrated into the grammar of English at the syntactic level. (Author/CFM)
Descriptors: English, Grammar, Intonation, Language Rhythm
Peer reviewedCohn, Jim – Sign Language Studies, 1986
A new deaf poetics has emerged, characterized by the focus on the centrality of the image in both American Sign Language (ASL) poems and in the international poetry community. A series of performances by ASL poets and other activities linking poets have provided new data to support the universal, i.e., poetic, phase through which language…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Deafness, Language Rhythm, Language Usage
Martin, James G. – J Verb Learning Verb Behav, 1970
Spectrograms of spontaneous speech revealed that syllables preceding a judged-pause location were usually longer than those following, whether or not a silent interval was present. Most judged-pause locations were junctures, but syllable length governed judgments independently of juncture cues. (Author/FWB)
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Language Rhythm, Psychoacoustics, Psycholinguistics
Peer reviewedMax, Ludo; Yudman, Elana M. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2003
This study with 10 adults who stutter and 10 nonstuttering controls completed speech, orofacial nonspeech, and finger isochronous rhythmic timing tasks to investigate the role of timing in stuttering. Findings extend growing evidence that stuttering individuals do not differ from nonstuttering individuals in the ability to generate temporal…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Language Rhythm, Motor Development, Oral Language
Peer reviewedHayes, Bruce P.; MacEachern, Margaret – Language, 1998
Argues that English folk verse is tightly patterned at the level of the quatrain, and rhythmic cadences are arranged in nonrandom, essentially strategic fashion. Examines why 26 truncation patterns are adhered to consistently through multiple stanzas. Explains the relevance of optimality theory to the study of quatrain types, developing an…
Descriptors: English Literature, Folk Culture, Language Rhythm, Morphology (Languages)
Peer reviewedWolff, Peter H. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2002
Indicates that during a motor sequencing task, dyslexic students anticipated the signal of an isochronic pacing metronome by intervals that were two or three times as long as those of age matched normal readers or normal adults. Discusses the implications of the findings for temporal information processing deficits on one hand, and impaired…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Elementary Education, Language Rhythm, Reading Research
Herold, Birgit; Hohle, Barbara; Walch, Elisabeth; Weber, Tanja; Obladen, Michael – Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 2008
Prosodic information, such as word stress and speech rhythm, is important in language acquisition, and sensitivity to stress patterns is present from birth onwards. Exposure to prosodic properties of the native language occurs prenatally. Preterm birth and an associated lack of exposure to prosodic information are suspected to affect language…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Scores, Language Processing, Syllables
Peebles, Jodi L. – Reading Teacher, 2007
This article discusses two activities--Readers Theatre and Rhythm Walks--that encourage students to "get moving" with fluency instruction. Movement can be a motivating factor for struggling students, as well as a kinesthetic tool for conceptualizing the rhythm and flow of fluent reading while triggering brain function for optimal learning. Also…
Descriptors: Movement Education, Reading Fluency, Student Motivation, Reading Instruction
Asu, Eva Liina; Nolan, Francis – Language and Speech, 2007
In Estonian, as in a number of other languages, the nuclear pitch accent is often low and level. This paper presents two studies of this phenomenon. The first, a phonetic analysis of carefully structured read sentences shows that low accentuation can also spread to the prenuclear accents in an intonational phrase. The resulting sentence contours…
Descriptors: Sentences, Phonology, Phonetic Analysis, Finno Ugric Languages
Honig, Alice Sterling – Early Childhood Today (1), 2006
This article discusses a way to boost babies' skills by taking advantage of rhythm and rhyme. Becoming aware of rhyming sounds boosts brain activity and a child's early literacy ability. Adding singsong rhyming words to requests for attention is an effective way for teachers to get toddlers to listen to what they say. Rhymes and rhythms add zest…
Descriptors: Rhyme, Emergent Literacy, Brain, Language Rhythm

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