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Peer reviewedBourdin, Beatrice; Fayol, Michel – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2000
Tests the hypothesis that the use of the written mode increases the working memory load. Finds that participants recalled more words in the oral condition than in either the written mode or the "oral and categorization" conditions and that second graders performed better in the oral mode than in the "oral and drawing" condition. (SC)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Grade 2, Grade 4, Language Processing
Peer reviewedHyland, Fiona – ELT Journal, 2001
Uses data from a study of English-as-a-Second-Language teacher-written feedback to show how this leads to teachers giving indirect feedback when dealing with plagiarism in student texts, which in turn leads to miscommunication with their students. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Feedback, Plagiarism, Second Language Instruction
Peer reviewedRoss, Kathleen; Brown, Jane K.; Letzter, Jacqueline; Roulston, Christine; Ugarte, Michael; Maier, Carol – ADFL Bulletin, 2001
Several authors who are both teachers and translators of literary works into English discuss teaching texts and translations. Draws on different experiences in a range of teaching situations: a great-books course, a multi-sectioned honors humanities course, a single-author course, a women's studies course, and a literary and cultural translation…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Teachers, Literature, Second Language Instruction
Clachar, Arlene – Language Learning, 2005
The study sought to examine the effect of lexical aspect and narrative discourse structure on the pattern of acquisition and use of English verbal morphology exhibited by creole-speaking students. Findings indicated that the emergent pattern of morphology in the creole participants' written interlanguage appeared to be influenced not only by…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, Morphology (Languages), Interlanguage, English
Polkinghorne, Donald E. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2005
Qualitative research is inquiry aimed at describing and clarifying human experience as it appears in people's lives. Researchers using qualitative methods gather data that serve as evidence for their distilled descriptions. Qualitative data are gathered primarily in the form of spoken or written language rather than in the form of numbers.…
Descriptors: Written Language, Qualitative Research, Research Methodology, Interviews
Bourassa, Derrick; Treiman, Rebecca – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2003
We examined the oral and written spelling performance on the Treiman-Bourassa Early Spelling Test (Treiman & Bourassa, 2000a) of 30 children with serious reading and spelling problems and 30 spelling-level-matched younger children who were progressing normally in learning to read and spell. The 2 groups' spellings were equivalent on a composite…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Spelling, Oral Language, Written Language
Li, Alan L. – Written Communication, 2004
Chinese characters are often viewed as a premodern or incomplete form of literacy. Authors with an autonomous view of literacy view Chinese as a concrete, homeostatic language inadequate for use in abstract thought and movement toward mass literacy. Even those with an ideological model framework propose that the intrinsic nature of Chinese…
Descriptors: Written Language, Romanization, Chinese, Literacy
Janssen, Anna; Murachver, Tamar – Written Communication, 2004
This study investigates the roles of biological and psychological gender, as well as assigned discussion topic, in the written language use of nonprofessional writers. University students wrote passages on three specific topics-one socioemotional and descriptive, one functional, and one involving political debate. Effects of biological gender were…
Descriptors: Written Language, Psychology, Gender Differences, Language Usage
Ernestus, Mirjam; Mak, Willem Marinus – Brain and Language, 2004
This paper discusses four experiments on Dutch which show that distinctive phonological features differ in their relevance for word recognition. The relevance of a feature for word recognition depends on its phonological stability, that is, the extent to which that feature is generally realized in accordance with its lexical specification in the…
Descriptors: Indo European Languages, Word Recognition, Phonology, Reading Skills
Kenner, Charmian – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2004
This paper proposes that young children who are growing up in a bilingual and biliterate environment may, at a fundamental level, experience their worlds not as separate linguistic and cultural entities but as "simultaneous". The data comes from a study of 6-year-olds in London who were learning to write in Chinese, Arabic or Spanish…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Young Children, Semitic Languages, Chinese
Parault, Susan J. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2006
Sound symbolism is the notion that the relation between word sounds and word meaning is not arbitrary for all words, but rather there is a subset of words in the world's languages for which sounds and their symbols have some degree of correspondence. This research investigates sound symbolism as a possible means of gaining semantic knowledge of…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Phonology, Written Language, Semantics
Cho, Jeung-Ryeul; Chen, Hsuan-Chih – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2005
The Korean orthography uses both alphabetic Hangul and logographic Hanja. Two experiments investigated semantic and phonological processing of words written in the two scripts. In the experiments, Korean readers had to respond to words either in a pure context with words from one single script or in a mixed context with words from the two scripts.…
Descriptors: Written Language, Semantics, Classification, Language Processing
Rathmann, Christian; Mann, Wolfgang; Morgan, Gary – Deafness and Education International, 2007
Researchers, the Deaf community, teachers of deaf children and speech and language therapists all share a concern about how to improve deaf children's written language skills. One part of literacy is story writing or narrative. A finding from a small number of studies is that children exposed to sign language from early childhood onwards achieve…
Descriptors: Written Language, Sign Language, Deafness, Language Skills
Anderson, Bruce – Applied Linguistics, 2007
Corpus-based research has shown that the frequency of use of particular grammatical structures and lexis in English is not always congruent with the content or ordering of explicit rules in pedagogical materials. The present study provides an additional example from French, focusing on word-order rules related to adjective position and the…
Descriptors: Second Language Instruction, Form Classes (Languages), Grammar, Second Language Learning
Delano, Monica E. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2007
The effects of a multicomponent intervention involving self-regulated strategy development delivered via video self-modeling on the written language performance of 3 students with Asperger syndrome were examined. During intervention sessions, each student watched a video of himself performing strategies for increasing the number of words written…
Descriptors: Written Language, Intervention, Asperger Syndrome, Writing Skills

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