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Peer reviewedWoods, Carol S. – Montessori Life, 1998
Presents suggestions for parents to stimulate children's language development. Suggestions include appreciating children's effort rather than correcting language, creating an environment that invites exploration, engaging in conversation frequently, playing with language and words, reading aloud daily to children, providing a variety of quality…
Descriptors: Caregiver Speech, Child Rearing, Children, Emergent Literacy
Peer reviewedCrain-Thoreson, Catherine; Dale, Philip S. – Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, 1999
A study involving 32 children with language delays investigated the effectiveness of Dialogic Reading, an interactive language-facilitation technique. After adult instruction in Dialogic Reading, children spoke more, made longer utterances, produced more words, and participated more in shared book reading. No differences were found in vocabulary…
Descriptors: Developmental Delays, Early Childhood Education, Interpersonal Communication, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedTomblin, J. Bruce; Spencer, Linda; Flock, Sarah; Tyler, Rich; Gantz, Bruce – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1999
English language achievement of 29 prelingually deaf children with three or more years of cochlear implant (CI) experience was compared to the achievement levels of 29 prelingually deaf children with hearing aids. CI users performed better than comparison subjects on signed and spoken English grammar and length of CI experience was significantly…
Descriptors: Children, Cochlear Implants, Congenital Impairments, Followup Studies
Peer reviewedYoder, Paul J.; Warren, Steven F. – Journal of Early Intervention, 1999
A study involving 58 children (17 to 36 months) with developmental disabilities in the prelinguistic period of development and their mothers found that the relationship between intentional communication and later language was, in part, due to covarying relationships with maternal responsivity. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Child Development, Communication Skills, Family Environment, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedLiu, Jun – TESOL Quarterly, 1999
Explores the labels "native speaker" (NS) and "nonnative speaker" (NNS) from the perspective of seven nonnative-English-speaking Teaching English as a Second or Other Language (TESOL) professionals. Contends that these terms are related to issues such as the order of learned languages, language competence, language-learning environment, cultural…
Descriptors: Cultural Background, English (Second Language), Language Acquisition, Language Proficiency
Oller, D. Kimbrough; Eilers, Rebecca E.; Neal, A. Rebecca; Cobo-Lewis, Alan B. – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1998
Onset of canonical babbling was investigated for 1,536 high-risk infants at about 10-months corrected age. Although delays were infrequent, they were often associated with genetic, neurological, anatomical, and/or physiological abnormalities. Over half the cases of late canonical babbling, at the time of discovery, were not associated with prior…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Child Development, Clinical Diagnosis, Communication Skills
Peer reviewedOller, D. Kimbrough; Eilers, Rebecca E.; Neal, A. Rebecca; Schwartz, Heidi K. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 1999
An evaluation of 3,469 infants at risk found that of those who showed late onset of canonical babbling, fewer than half had been diagnosed with a medical problem accounting for the delay. A follow-up study found those with delayed canonical babbling had smaller vocabularies at 18, 24, and 30 months. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Developmental Delays, Disability Identification, Infants
Peer reviewedMeltzoff, Andrew N. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 1999
Examines three alternatives to the classical framework of early cognitive development: modularity-nativism, connectionism, and theory-theory. Arguments are marshaled to support the "theory-theory" view, which emphasizes a combination of innate structure and qualitative reorganization in children's thought based on input from the people and things…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Cultural Influences
Developments in Early Lexical Comprehension: A Comparison of Parental Report and Controlled Testing.
Peer reviewedHarris, Margaret; Chasin, Joan – Journal of Child Language, 1999
Six children were studied from the age of 6 months to 1 year and 6 months to chart their developing comprehension vocabularies from the first to the 100th word. Observational data were used in the first instance to identify newly comprehended words and then controlled testing was carried out for each word to confirm and expand the observational…
Descriptors: Child Language, Classification, Comparative Analysis, Evaluation Methods
Peer reviewedClark, Ellen Riojas; Gonzalez, Virginia – Educational Horizons, 1998
Assessments of a 6-year-old Spanish monolingual and 5-year-old bilingual children included a home-language survey, parents' and teachers' ratings, cartoon conservation scales, and standardized tests. Nonverbal cognitive development was shown to influence language acquisition. Cultural and linguistic factors affected children differently. (SK)
Descriptors: Alternative Assessment, Cognitive Development, Cultural Background, Family Environment
Peer reviewedSingleton, Jenny L.; Supalla, Samuel; Litchfield, Sharon; Schley, Sara – Topics in Language Disorders, 1998
Critically examines the traditional notion of American Sign Language/English bilingualism. This model is contrasted with the "ASL/English as a spoken language" bilingual model in which the modality constraints facing the deaf child are presented as the fundamental issue for ASL/English bilingualism. Empirical and applied research supporting the…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Bilingual Education, Deafness, English (Second Language)
Peer reviewedDehaene-Lambertz, G.; Houston, D. – Language and Speech, 1998
Assessed the amount of linguistic information needed by 2-year-old infants to recognize whether or not a sentence belongs to their native language. A cross-linguistic study of French and American 2-month-old infants was conducted, measuring the latency of the first ocular saccade toward a loudspeaker playing short French and English utterances.…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Contrastive Linguistics, English, Error Patterns
Peer reviewedLee, Young-Ja; Lee, Jong-Sook; Lee, Jeong-Wuk – Early Child Development and Care, 1997
Examined the relationships between young children's language ability and their home or day care play environments. Found that mother-child interaction pattern was the best predictor of children's language abilities, even though teachers and day care mothers engaged in better quality interactions than did home care mothers. Aspects of home…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Day Care, Educational Environment, Family Environment
Peer reviewedHestvik, Arild; Philip, William – Language Acquisition, 2000
Four experimental studies were designed to test, in Norwegian, the hypothesis that children's non-adultlike interpretations of pronouns may be partly attributable to a lexical factor interacting with the A-Chain Condition. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Linguistic Theory
Peer reviewedAlberto, Paul A.; Fredrick, Laura D. – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2000
This article presents a five-step sequence for teaching children with disabilities to read pictures. Steps are sequenced for content and complexity of picture, student response requirement, and language demands. They include: (1) identify person, (2) identify object, (3) identify person and object, (4) identify action, and (5) identify sequence.…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Beginning Reading, Disabilities, Expressive Language


