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Smith, Antony T.; Angotti, Robin L. – Voices from the Middle, 2012
Vocabulary presents a challenge to students in content area classes, making it difficult to understand new concepts and make connections to background knowledge. This article describes the 5 Cs, a tool developed to help content area teachers consider vocabulary as part of lesson planning. By selecting a set of key words for instruction, teachers…
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Teacher Role, Vocabulary Development, Teaching Methods
Rader, Nancy de Villiers; Zukow-Goldring, Patricia – Language Sciences, 2012
How do young infants discover word meanings? We have theorized that caregivers educate infants' attention (cf. Gibson, J.J., 1966) by synchronizing the saying of a word with a dynamic gesture displaying the object/referent (Zukow-Goldring, 1997). Detecting an amodal invariant across gesture and speech brackets the word and object within the…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Caregiver Child Relationship, Infants, Nonverbal Communication
Stamer, Melissa K.; Vitevitch, Michael S. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2012
Neighborhood density--the number of words that sound similar to a given word (Luce & Pisoni, 1998)--influences word learning in native English-speaking children and adults (Storkel, 2004; Storkel, Armbruster & Hogan, 2006): novel words with many similar sounding English words (i.e., dense neighborhood) are learned more quickly than novel words…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Spanish, Phonology, Word Recognition
Kucan, Linda – Reading Teacher, 2012
This article makes use of Perfetti's Lexical Quality Hypothesis as a perspective for thinking about vocabulary instruction in terms of semantics (meaning), phonology (pronunciation), orthography (spelling), morphology (meaningful word parts), and syntax (how words function in sentences). Examples are presented of how these aspects of vocabulary…
Descriptors: Sentences, Spelling, Phonology, Semantics
McMurray, Bob; Horst, Jessica S.; Samuelson, Larissa K. – Psychological Review, 2012
Classic approaches to word learning emphasize referential ambiguity: In naming situations, a novel word could refer to many possible objects, properties, actions, and so forth. To solve this, researchers have posited constraints, and inference strategies, but assume that determining the referent of a novel word is isomorphic to learning. We…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Vocabulary Development, Language Acquisition, Interaction
Floccia, Caroline; Luche, Claire Delle; Durrant, Samantha; Butler, Joseph; Goslin, Jeremy – Cognition, 2012
The recognition of familiar words was evaluated in 20-month-old children raised in a rhotic accent environment to parents that had either rhotic or non-rhotic accents. Using an Intermodal Preferential Looking task children were presented with familiar objects (e.g. "bird") named in their rhotic or non-rhotic form. Children were only able to…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Vocabulary Development, Pronunciation, Toddlers
Sulpizio, Simone; McQueen, James M. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2012
In two eye-tracking experiments in Italian, we investigated how acoustic information and stored knowledge about lexical stress are used during the recognition of tri-syllabic spoken words. Experiment 1 showed that Italians use acoustic cues to a word's stress pattern rapidly in word recognition, but only for words with antepenultimate stress.…
Descriptors: Cues, Suprasegmentals, Word Recognition, Acoustics
Johnson, David; VanBrackle, Lewis – Assessing Writing, 2012
Raters of Georgia's (USA) state-mandated college-level writing exam, which is intended to ensure a minimal university-level writing competency, are trained to grade holistically when assessing these exams. A guiding principle in holistic grading is to not focus exclusively on any one aspect of writing but rather to give equal weight to style,…
Descriptors: Writing Evaluation, Linguistics, Writing Tests, English (Second Language)
Sagacious, Sophisticated, and Sedulous: The Importance of Discussing 50-Cent Words with Preschoolers
Collins, Molly F. – Young Children, 2012
Adults often use simple words instead of complex words when talking to young children. Reasons vary from teachers' beliefs that young children cannot understand sophisticated vocabulary because they are too young or have limited language skills, to teachers' unfamiliarity with complex words or with strategies for supporting vocabulary. As a…
Descriptors: Language Skills, Preschool Children, Vocabulary Development, Early Childhood Education
Bolger, Patrick; Zapata, Gabriela – Language Learning, 2011
This article extends recent findings that presenting semantically related vocabulary simultaneously inhibits learning. It does so by adding story contexts. Participants learned 32 new labels for known concepts from four different semantic categories in stories that were either semantically related (one category per story) or semantically unrelated…
Descriptors: Semantics, Second Language Learning, Vocabulary Development, Classification
Lany, Jill; Saffran, Jenny R. – Developmental Science, 2011
Infants can use statistical regularities to form rudimentary word categories (e.g. noun, verb), and to learn the meanings common to words from those categories. Using an artificial language methodology, we probed the mechanisms by which two types of statistical cues (distributional and phonological regularities) affect word learning. Because…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Statistics, Semantics
When Variability Matters More than Meaning: The Effect of Lexical Forms on Use of Phonemic Contrasts
Thiessen, Erik D. – Developmental Psychology, 2011
During the first half of the 2nd year of life, infants struggle to use phonemic distinctions in label-object association tasks. Prior experiments have demonstrated that exposure to the phonemes in distinct lexical forms (e.g., /"d"/ and /"t"/ in "daddy" and "tiger", respectively) facilitates infants' use of phonemic contrasts but also that they…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Phonology, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Infants
Barac, Raluca; Bialystok, Ellen – Language Teaching, 2011
There has always been a common-sense view that the number of languages that children learn, whether through natural exposure or educational intervention, has consequences for their development. The assumption was that these consequences were potentially damaging. Even now, after approximately 50 years of research on the topic, parents remain…
Descriptors: Metalinguistics, Cognitive Development, Bilingualism, Young Children
Williams, Dilafruz; Anderson, Jennifer – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2015
This case study explores what it is like for culturally and linguistically diverse adolescents who are low-income English Language Learners to experience garden-based education at their school's Learning Gardens in southeast Portland, Oregon, even as they and their families--driven from their homelands as immigrants and refugees--try to establish…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Student Diversity, Adolescents, Low Income Groups
Ozmen, Kemal Sinan; Aydin, Hale Ülkü – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2015
Teachers' beliefs about language learning and teaching are largely shaped during pre-service teacher education. Although many empirical studies have analyzed various dimensions of how student teachers' beliefs and practices are formed, the literature is scarce with the research on student teacher's beliefs about oral corrective feedback. For the…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Student Teacher Attitudes, Error Correction, Language Proficiency

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