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Washington, Gene – 1983
A heuristic procedure can be used to teach organizational skills to students of technical writing. Designed to allow students on their own to explore ways that numbers can be used to give a definite shape to technical information, its central feature is a matrix composed of a series of control numbers (horizontal axis) and organizing concerns…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Heuristics, Higher Education, Logical Thinking
Laubitz, Zofia – 1987
In a study of young children's use of conjunction in narrative discourse, different types of discourse were collected from 34 preschool children: visually prompted stories, stories told without visual stimuli, responses to questions about the prompted stories, explanations of a game, and responses in interviews. The discourse was analyzed for the…
Descriptors: Child Language, Coherence, Conjunctions, Discourse Analysis
Garcia, Cheryl R.; Jaeger, Jeri J. – 1986
A study investigated the effect of adult correction of grammatical errors during the language learning process. Four girls and four boys, ages 2 and 3, were interviewed individually, tape recorded and asked to repeat an adult sentence exactly. Overt mistakes were corrected either with an overt correction with expansion or with expansion only,…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Feedback
Gibson, Claude L. – 1981
Knowing the connections between ideas and the interrelationships among groups of ideas is a skill that can be useful throughout the writing process. Writers who are aware of the meaning relationships existing between sentences and ideas can discover the logical possibilities inherent in their topic at the prewriting stage, determine patterns for…
Descriptors: Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), Higher Education, Sentence Combining
Boiarsky, Carolyn – 1981
A study and review of the revisions of professional writers reveals 11 functions of revision: (1) altering form, (2) organizing information, (3) creating transitions, (4) deleting information, (5) expanding information, (6) emphasizing information, (7) subordinating information, (8) creating immediacy, (9) improving syntactic structures, (10)…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Language Role, Revision (Written Composition), Secondary Education
Crismore, Avon – 1982
"The Later Middle Ages: Civilization Reborn" in Ginn's "Our World," a chapter from a sixth grade social studies textbook, was assessed by the author, who used specific evaluation criteria. Although four strengths were indicated, the author dealt primarily with weaknesses of the text and made many suggestions for improvement.…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Readability
Land, Robert E. – 1984
To determine whether older students make more revisions in their essays, more kinds of revisions, or "bigger" revisions than younger students, a study was made of revisions made by 30 randomly selected seventh grade and 30 randomly selected eleventh grade students. Students were asked to write and revise twice essays in which they described a…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Comparative Analysis, Grade 11, Grade 7
Sokolov, Jeffrey L. – 1984
Research on the grammatical cues that guide comprehension of a language and that children are most sensitive to, particularly in Hebrew, is reviewed as an introduction to the first phase of a study conducted with 20 native Hebrew-speaking children aged 4 to 9 in southern California and a group of adults to provide comparative data. The study…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Comprehension
Murphy, Sandra; Gunderson, Lee – 1979
Twenty randomly selected subjects in inner city schools at grades 2, 5, 8, and 11 participated in a study that examined whether (1) the number of cohesive units produced in writing will be greater for older students than for younger subjects; (2) the use of cohesive ties in consecutive sentences (a measure of awareness of audience) will increase…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), Context Clues
Perera, Katharine – 1985
Data from a language development project at the Polytechnic of Wales were used to compare the speech and writing of 48 monolingual English-speaking children. The 48 children came from three groups, aged 8, 10, and 12. For the collection of spoken data, the children, divided into groups of three, were tape recorded while they made a construction…
Descriptors: Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
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Saddler, Bruce – Language and Literacy Spectrum, 2006
In this article a method to improve sentence writing ability called sentence combining is explained. The potential effects of sentence combining are related and relevant research summarized. In addition, how to introduce sentence combining practice to a class, key instructional components including oral practice and peer assistance, sources of…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Writing Ability, Writing Improvement
Jeffree, Dorothy; McConkey, Roy – Special Education: Forward Trends, 1974
Descriptors: Case Studies, Downs Syndrome, Drafting, Exceptional Child Education
Frazier, Lyn – 1977
The model of sentence perception proposed by Fodor, Bever and Garrett (1974) emphasizes the importance of grammatical cues signalling clause boundaries, and suggests that segmentation of a sentence into clauses precedes computation of the internal structure of those clauses. However, this model has nothing to say about the many sentences in which…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Grammar, Language Processing, Language Research
Hollerbach, Wolf – 1975
A device of emphasis in French syntax is defined as a construction of syntactic paraphrase whose function is to make certain parts of a sentence stand out for purposes of contrast, clarification, differentiation, or because a given element is considered important. These devices exist in French because of the lack of a phonemic stress system, and…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), French, Language Instruction, Language Patterns
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Canger, Una R. – 1969
The primary goal of the present study is an exposition of the structure of Mam, a Mayan language of the Mamean group. Mam is the most widely spoken of the four Mamean languages, and has been roughly estimated to have a quarter million speakers located in the departments of Huehuetenango and San Marcos in Guatemala and in the state of Chiapas in…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Descriptive Linguistics, Language Patterns, Language Research
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