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Gilbert, Victoria – Learning Languages, 2010
Learning to speak another language requires students to adopt new ways of thinking. Some teachers believe that students can assimilate idiomatic expressions and cultural turns of phrase simply through the teacher's use and the students' practice. Others work to explicitly show the difference between the target language and native language, as if…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Classroom Techniques, Native Language, Second Language Learning
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Smith, Phil – Qualitative Inquiry, 2008
An approximately excessive, already-much-too-full, incomprehensibly elliptical poetics of research representation, this post/conceptual writing/writhing about research explores a poetic, poemic, polemic, politic, post discourse, and describes a new grammar and rhetoric for understanding education and social science. It offers an undiscovered set…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Educational Research, Figurative Language, Postmodernism
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Tabossi, Patrizia; Fanari, Rachele; Wolf, Kinou – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
Three experiments tested the main claims of the idiom decomposition hypothesis: People have clear intuitions on the semantic compositionality of idiomatic expressions, which determines the syntactic behavior of these expressions and how they are recognized. Experiment 1 showed that intuitions are clear only for a very restricted number of…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Semantics, Semiotics, Language Processing
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Amanzio, Martina; Geminiani, Giuliano; Leotta, Daniela; Cappa, Stefano – Brain and Language, 2008
The comprehension of non-literal language was investigated in 20 probable Alzheimer's disease (pAD) patients by comparing their performance to that of 20 matched control subjects. pAD patients were unimpaired in the comprehension of conventional metaphors and idioms. However, their performance was significantly lower in the case of…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Alzheimers Disease, Figurative Language, Patients
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Moseley, Bryan; Dustin, Daniel – College Teaching, 2008
In this article, the authors advance a metaphor born of chaos theory that views the college classroom as a complex dynamical system. The authors reason further that "teaching as chaos" provides a more accurate representation of the teaching-learning process than the existing linear scientific metaphors on which traditional learning assessments are…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Teaching Methods, Higher Education, Teacher Effectiveness
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Rosenblatt, Paul C. – Death Studies, 2008
The concept of recovery following bereavement can be both useful and misleading. As a metaphor, the concept of recovery highlights some aspects of bereavement and obscures others. Bereaved people interviewed in 3 different studies typically did not bring up the term recovery so it did not seem to be a term that described their experience. Across…
Descriptors: Grief, Figurative Language, Postmodernism, Phenomenology
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Casasanto, Daniel – Language Learning, 2008
The idea that language shapes the way we think, often associated with Benjamin Whorf, has long been decried as not only wrong but also fundamentally wrong-headed. Yet, experimental evidence has reopened debate about the extent to which language influences nonlinguistic cognition, particularly in the domain of time. In this article, I will first…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Time Perspective, Linguistics, Experiments
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Johansen, Bruce E. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
For the state of Washington's one-hundredth birthday, in 1989, Native peoples there decided to revive a distinctive mode of transportation--long-distance journeys by canoe--along with an entire culture associated with it. Born as the "Paddle to Seattle," during the past two decades these canoe journeys have become a summertime staple for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Transportation, Water, Recreational Activities
Nagai, Ayako – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Utilizing the methodology of Conversation Analysis (CA), this study examines teaching moments observed in free conversations by pairs of Japanese and American friends. CA's detailed turn-by-turn analysis reveals that teaching of vocabulary, idioms, and culture occurs when native speakers orient to the non-nativeness of the other speakers.…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Vocabulary Development, Figurative Language, Classification
Alvarez, Patricia Lynn – ProQuest LLC, 2011
The purpose of this study was to explore Latina students' identity as Latina first-generation college students. Constructivist grounded theory (Charmaz, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006) was used to explore two research questions: (a) For Latina students who are the first in their family to go to college, what is their understanding of being a Latina…
Descriptors: Parent Background, Educational Attainment, Higher Education, First Generation College Students
Kathpalia, Sujata S.; Carmel, Heah Lee Hah – RELC Journal: A Journal of Language Teaching and Research, 2011
In language teaching, emphasis is usually placed on grammatical competence rather than metaphorical competence to improve a learner's proficiency in the target language. Research has shown that figurative language poses a problem for second language learners whether it is in their ability to interpret, process, or produce metaphors. This affects…
Descriptors: Grammar, Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), Writing (Composition)
Sert, Olcay – Online Submission, 2009
This paper uses a combined methodology to analyse the conversations in supplementary audio-visual materials to be implemented in language teaching classrooms in order to enhance the Interactional Competence (IC) of the learners. Based on a corpus of 90.000 words (Coupling Corpus), the author tries to reveal the potentials of using TV series in …
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Television, Computational Linguistics
Mislevy, Robert J. – National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing (CRESST), 2009
From a contemporary perspective on cognition, the between-persons variables in trait-based arguments in educational assessment are absurd over-simplifications. Yet, for a wide range of applications, they work. Rather than seeing such variables as independently-existing characteristics of people, we can view them as summaries of patterns in…
Descriptors: Test Validity, Educational Assessment, Item Response Theory, Logical Thinking
Lai, Vicky Tzuyin – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Metaphorical expressions appear once every twenty words in everyday language, and play a central role in communication. Some cognitive linguistic theories propose that understanding metaphorical expressions requires mappings from one conceptual domain to the other. My research uses Event-Related Potentials to examine the processing, the…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Role, Communication (Thought Transfer), Linguistic Theory
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Ngara, Constantine – Exceptionality Education International, 2009
The paper presents the author's views on inspiring creative thinking among students through a folktale. The mbira metaphor is this author's interpretation of a unique African (Shona) folktale that has the potential to enrich the pedagogy of giftedness. The mbira metaphor is an informative and thought-provoking folktale originating from previous…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Creative Thinking, Folk Culture, African Culture
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