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Fagan, Edward R. – Reading Impr, 1969
Emphasizes the necessity of teaching disadvantaged students to organize and classify material and to attend to detail. It presents methods of alerting students to these things and to constructions found in literary language. Intelligent, creative reading, not speed, is the ultimate goal. Bibliography. (RW)
Descriptors: Attention Control, Classification, Creative Reading, Figurative Language
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Reynolds, Ralph E.; Schwartz, Robert M. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1983
Context-dependent metaphoric sentences of literally equivalent paraphrases were used as concluding statements for short didactic passages to investigate whether metaphors help or hinder prose comprehension. Adult participants' recall protocols indicated increased memorability for passages with metaphoric conclusions. (Author/LC)
Descriptors: Adults, Cues, Figurative Language, Incidental Learning
Gildea, Patricia; Glucksberg, Sam – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1983
The question of what constitutes a minimal appropriate context for understanding a metaphor is examined through the relative effectiveness of three types of contextual priming for metaphor comprehension. All three produced immediate and automatic metaphor comprehension. The use of context to disambiguate both literal and nonliteral speech messages…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Comprehension, Concept Formation
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Wallenstein, Barry – Journal of General Education, 1981
Discusses the public's lack of appreciation for poetry. Gives examples of poems expressing irony and emotions. Argues that poetry's philosophy, mode, and tone of communication make it difficult. Considers poetry's subversive, exploratory, and entertaining aspects. Presents detailed analyses of four poems. (DMM)
Descriptors: Figurative Language, General Education, Humanities Instruction, Irony
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Brasseur, Judith; Jimenez, Beatrice C. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 1989
Seventy-one university students completed the Fullerton Language Test for Adolescents--Subtest on Idioms. Of the 18-21-year-old group, 51 percent fell within the "Competence Range," while 84 percent of the 22-29-year-old group and 91 percent of the 30-year-old or over group fell within this range. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, College Students, Figurative Language
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D'Angelo, Frank J. – Journal of Advanced Composition, 1990
Proposes a theoretical model of organizing texts that uses four "master" tropes (metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche, and irony) as a conceptual framework to represent the processes of selecting, ordering, and placing words, ideas, and images into a text. Discusses possible practical application of tropical operations to nonfictional…
Descriptors: College English, Discourse Modes, Figurative Language, Higher Education
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Ezell, Helen K.; Goldstein, Howard – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1992
Four nine year olds with mild mental retardation received training on the meaning of idiomatic phrases. All children demonstrated learning and an ability to understand the learned idioms when presented in unfamiliar contexts. Children were able to generalize their receptive learning to an expressive task with varying levels of success. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Comprehension, Elementary Education, Expressive Language, Figurative Language
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Henry, Lucy A.; Millar, Susanna – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1991
Results of three experiments indicate that the developmental increase in memory span cannot be explained by differences in identification time or by the hypothesis that articulation time is the sole or major cause for the increase. It is argued that the development of memory span with age depends on a combination of factors. (BC)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Articulation (Speech), Cognitive Development, Encoding (Psychology)
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Lazar, Gillian – ELT Journal, 1996
Examines definitions and suggests examples of types of figurative language to which students may usefully be exposed in the course of their learning. The article discusses implications for the teaching of figurative language and presents sample materials representing different strategies for helping students understand and generate figurative…
Descriptors: Class Activities, College Students, Cultural Context, Dictionaries
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Akerman, Maria – Environmental Education Research, 2005
At the time of its introduction at the end of the 1980s, the concept of natural capital represented new, more ecologically aware thinking in economics. As a symbol of novel thinking, the metaphor of natural capital stimulated a debate between different disciplinary traditions on the definitions of the concept and research priorities and methods.…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Sustainable Development, Economics, Natural Resources
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Johnson, John A. – Multivariate Behavioral Research, 2004
This study describes the relation between personality items' validities, defined as the items' correlations with acquaintance ratings on the Big 5 personality factors, and other itemmetric properties including ambiguity, syntactic complexity, social desirability, content, and trait indicativity. Five external validity coefficients for each item on…
Descriptors: Personality Measures, Personality Assessment, Social Desirability, Personality Traits
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Paechter, Carrie – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2004
Space is largely ignored in both the theory and the practice of education. At the same time, however, there is an abundance of spatial metaphors that are used to describe schooling, the curriculum and educational processes. Some of these (top of the class, department) have their origins in spatial arrangements that once dominated schools and…
Descriptors: School Space, English, Figurative Language, Educational Practices
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Whitfield, Patricia T.; Klug, Beverly J. – Multicultural Perspectives, 2004
Throughout the modern era in the 20th century, there have been continual efforts to reform schools and make them more efficient, imitating the industrial model of standardization. However, many students were left behind in this process. Certain dimensions of teaching, like making connections with all students, were lost in standards-based…
Descriptors: Caring, Figurative Language, Academic Standards, Educational Change
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Musolff, Andreas – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2004
On the basis of a corpus of British and German press coverage of European Union (EU) politics over the 1990s, the paper analyses uses of the geopolitical HEART metaphor. Over the course of the 1990s, successive British governments promised to work "at" the "heart of Europe". However, no one ever claimed that Britain was…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Foreign Countries, German, Newspapers
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Rawson, Katherine A. – Cognitive Psychology, 2004
A prevalent assumption in text comprehension research is that many aspects of text processing are automatic, with automaticity typically defined in terms of properties (e.g., speed and effort). The present research advocates conceptualization of automaticity in terms of underlying mechanisms and evaluates two such accounts, a…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Word Processing, Sentence Structure, Concept Formation
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