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Jensen, Robert – Behavior Analyst, 2006
This paper critically assesses the scholarship in introductory psychology textbooks in relation to the topic of latent learning. A review of the treatment of latent learning in 48 introductory psychology textbooks published between 1948 and 2004, with 21 of these texts published since 1999, reveals that the scholarship on the topic of latent…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Reinforcement, Cognitive Mapping, Psychology
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McGuckian, Maria; Henry, Alison – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2007
Background: Much remains unknown about grammatical morpheme (GM) acquisition by children with moderate hearing impairment (HI) acquiring spoken English. Aims: To investigate how moderate HI impacts on the use of GMs in speech and to provide an explanation for the pattern of findings. Methods & Procedures: Elicited and spontaneous speech data were…
Descriptors: Semantics, Morphemes, Linguistic Input, Oral Language
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Hong, Barbara; Ehrensberger, Wendy – Preventing School Failure, 2007
In this article, the authors discuss 4 critical components of mathematics assessment that relate to instruction: (a) teachers need to be knowledgeable about mathematical standards and align them with assessment; (b) assessment should combine formal and informal approaches to obtain a more authentic picture of students' performance and meaningfully…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Error Patterns, Guidelines, Special Needs Students
Smith, Michael Sharwood – 1996
Just as learning a first language is sometimes compared to existence within the relatively sheltered world of the Garden of Eden, the process of learning a second language is viewed as analogous to survival after expulsion from the Garden into a relatively harsh world, in which the learner must come to a conscious understanding of form and meaning…
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Interlanguage, Language Processing
Kanno, Yasuko – 1989
The use of connectives in 41 academic papers written for an English writing course by Japanese students ranging from university sophomores to graduate students was examined. Connectives were categorized as additive, adversative, causal, and temporal. Each connective type was subject to certain types of error. Additive connectives tended to be…
Descriptors: College Students, English for Academic Purposes, English (Second Language), Error Patterns
Terao, Yasushi – 1989
This paper adopts the activation spreading theory to explore how lexical items are accessed. Approximately 3300 errors from both public sources and ordinary conversation in Japanese are analyzed. Analyses suggest that there are two types of environment in which contextual lexical errors occur, and that these two types of environment correspond to…
Descriptors: Encoding (Psychology), Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Foreign Countries
Shake, Mary C. – 1982
A review of the relevant literature reveals that reading reversals, whether in sequence or orientation, comprise a very small proportion of the total errors made by even poor readers. Young children tend to make more reversals, yet this tendency generally disappears with age. Top-down theorists feel that the reversal tendency of young children is…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Connected Discourse, Elementary Education, Error Patterns
Kaplan, Marsha A. – 1983
The patterns of acquisition of the passe compose and imperfect tenses in French among 16 adult beginning and intermediate students were studied. Based on 15-minute speech samples in which both verb tenses were elicited by seeded questions and cues for descriptive and narrative monologues, the intermediate learners had greater success with the…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Classroom Techniques, Curriculum Design, Error Patterns
Hsueh, F. S. – 1983
Common problems encountered in teaching Chinese that involve classical, intentional malapropisms (learned errors) are discussed. Three aspects unique to Chinese are addressed: (1) since Chinese writing is logographic, some malapropisms occur because of similar graphs; (2) since many expressions come from classical Chinese, and instruction in…
Descriptors: Chinese, Error Patterns, Higher Education, Language Usage
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Pincus, Morris; And Others – Arithmetic Teacher, 1975
Recommendations for remediation of 28 distinct common error patterns in arithmetic computation are described. (SD)
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Computation, Educational Diagnosis, Elementary Education
Humphreys, Michael S. – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1975
Endpoint and distance effects have been observed in the protocols of subjects learning linear orderings. These were produced by subjects learning the frequency of word occurrence as the greater member of a relationship. Error patterns were similar on all trials. (CHK)
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Learning Processes, Memory, Psychological Testing
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Taylor, Barry P. – TESOL Quarterly, 1975
A remedial approach involving review, contrast, and re-review for remedying second language learners' errors is suggested. (RM)
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Language Instruction, Learning, Learning Processes
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Hammarberg, B. – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, 1974
The position here is that error analysis is inadequate, particularly from the language-teaching point of view. Non-errors must be considered in specifying the learner's current command of the language, its limits, and his learning tasks. A cyclic procedure of elicitation and analysis, to secure evidence of errors and non-errors, is outlined.…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Interference (Language)
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Burt, Marina K. – TESOL Quarterly, 1975
Descriptors: Adult Students, English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns
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Schachter, Jacqueline – Language Learning, 1974
Contrastive analysis a priori predicts facts of possible errors in learning a second language that contrastive analysis a posteriori cannot explain. In a study of relative clause formation, the latter approach shows that students have no trouble, whereas the former approach shows the task to be so difficult that they avoid it. (AG)
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Contrastive Linguistics, Error Patterns, Interference (Language)
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