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Lorentz, James P. – 1974
This is a report on the deviant phonological system of a 4-year-old child. Although this system is characterized by deletions, assimilations, simplifications, and distortions, there is a regularity in the system which lends itself to systematic phonological analysis. Based on an examination of sample phonological deviations, the following rules…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Child Language, Distinctive Features (Language), English
Bodine, Ann – 1970
Mongoloid children appear to be useful candidates for studying difficult methodological problems found in developmental research. They represent a subpopulation in which general development is markedly slower than in the normal child and in which language development appears to be more dependent on age than general intellectual development. This…
Descriptors: Child Language, Delayed Speech, Handicapped Children, Language Ability
PDF pending restorationErvin-Tripp, Susan M. – 1973
The research reported in this paper concerns an initial study asking two questions: Is second language learning like first language learning? Is there a change in learning rate or process with age? A nonrandom sample of children aged 4 to 9 years was studied. Subjects were 31 English-speaking children in Geneva, Switzerland, who were in schools…
Descriptors: Child Language, Early Childhood Education, Elementary School Students, Language Acquisition
Schwartz, Judy I.; And Others – 1974
DISTAR (Direct Instruction Systems for Teaching Arithmetic and Reading) is a structured program designed to present basic skills and concepts in such a way that the child's complete mastery of each step in the programed sequence is ensured before proceeding to subsequent steps. This study investigated the effects of the program using 52 children…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Child Language, Conventional Instruction, Grade 1
Rosenthal, William S. – 1972
This paper describes the results of two studies of auditory processing in child aphasia, and their implication for understanding deviant language development. The term "aphasia" is discussed as it is used to describe adult and child language disorders. A first experiment on the auditory functioning in aphasic and nonaphasic children suggests that…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Child Language
Bloom, Lois Masket – 1968
The research reported is part of an investigation into the acquisition of grammar, using nonlinguistic information from situational and behavioral context to analyze the development of linguistic expression. Three children were seen for approximately 8 hours, every 6 weeks, in their homes, from the age of 19 months--soon after the earliest…
Descriptors: Child Language, Function Words, Generative Grammar, Grammar
Robertson, Jean E. – 1970
This paper focuses on four studies of pupils' reading comprehension completed at the University of Alberta. A number of investigators have described the acquisition and use of connectives by pupils and have indicated the importance of connectives in the development of abstract logical thinking. (Teachers often consider these words too simple to…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English, Interdisciplinary Approach
Wybraniec, Ania, Ed. – 1968
Nine transcripts of recorded conversation of German children ranging from 10 through 19 years of age are of special interest to linguists working on child language. The recordings, made in Heidelberg, Berlin, Hanover, and Urach/Wurttemberg, include elicited behaviors called "linguistic activities". The interviewers attempt to elicit: (1)…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Childhood Attitudes, Childhood Interests
Moskowitz, Arlene I. – 1968
The phonologies of three English-speaking children at approximately two years of age are examined. Two of the analyses are based on published studies; the third is based on observations and recordings made by the author. Summary statements on phonemic inventories and on correspondences with the adult model are presented. For the third case, fairly…
Descriptors: Child Language, Consonants, Distinctive Features (Language), English
Fraser, Bruce; Klatt, Mary M. – 1968
This document "attempts to provide a representative, undogmatic, and fairly thorough coverage of selected areas of the psycholinguistic literature which are not accurately covered in existing bibliographies." Because the authors feel that psycholinguistics consists of the study of the acquisition, production, and understanding of a natural…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Anthologies, Articulation (Speech), Artificial Speech
Feldman, Carol; Shen, Michael – 1969
Fifteen bilingual and 15 monolingual Head Start children, ranging in age from 4 to 6, were administered three types of tasks: (1) object constancy task: subject was shown a common object, a transformation was done on the object, e.g., crushing a paper cup, and then that object plus an identical pre-transformed object, were shown to the subject and…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Bilingualism, Black Students, Child Language
Wepman, Joseph M.; Hass, Wilbur – 1969
Relatively little research has been done on the quantitative characteristics of children's word usage. This spoken count was undertaken to investigate those aspects of word usage and frequency which could cast light on lexical processes in grammar and verbal development in children. Three groups of 30 children each (boys and girls) from…
Descriptors: Child Language, Computational Linguistics, Form Classes (Languages), Function Words
Pflaum, Susanna Whitney – 1974
As a reference for future teachers and for those already working in the field of early childhood education, this book presents information about young children's language development, emphasizing language as the primary basis for reading acquisition. In the first section of the book, language growth during preschool years is explored, with…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Child Language, Early Childhood Education, Language Acquisition
Brownell, Winifred – 1973
Irregularities in oral fluency, or "disfluencies," are common in the speech habits of both children and adults. Disfluencies can take the form of hesitations, revisions, repetitions, or interjections. Most disfluenceies do not occur at random, but are directly linked to other factors such as verbal planning--the combination of decisions…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Child Language, Communication Skills, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Oller, Kimbrough – 1973
The pronunciations of children do not merely represent accidental misses with respect to adult pronunciation. Children employ substitutions and deletions in highly systematic ways; child pronunciations reflect a set of simplification strategies. The major common processes of both normal and abnormal child phonology result in simplification of…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Consonants


