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Kushner, Malcolm – 1976
Recently, communications scholars and theorists have begun formulating rules to describe the workings of language in various situations of everyday use. Theoretically, current rules approaches are in violation of the basic philosophy underlying communication theory--Whitehead's notion of process. The inconsistency is a function of the degree of…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Conceptual Schemes, Discourse Analysis, Information Theory
Arundale, Robert B. – 1978
Research on how communicating human beings produce and understand language has focused mostly on what language is, less on how language is processed, and little on who produces and understands language. However, the interaction between what, who, and how is very significant. The importance of who does languaging is related both to the cognitive…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Communication (Thought Transfer), Interaction Process Analysis
Diez, Mary E. – 1983
A study examined variation in code choice in the same speakers in two contrasting situations--interorganizational and intraorganizational bargaining. Naturalistic interactions between teams of teacher's union bargaining agents, role-playing teachers, and school board members in the two settings were coded, using measures of structural and lexical…
Descriptors: Adults, Code Switching (Language), Collective Bargaining, Communication Research
Pickert, Sarah M.; Sgan, Mabel L. – 1977
Categories such as commanding, requesting, and explaining were used to analyze communicative intentions in conversations of 108 children, aged five through nine, during three sets of play activities varying in task specification and leadership role assignment. Results showed that the frequency and variety of communicative intention categories…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Child Language, Children, Communication Skills
Dirksen, Carolyn Rowland – 1978
Sociolinguists have recently demonstrated the value of directives in indicating the relationship between status and linguistic form. The purpose of the instrument developed for this study was to quantify the coerciveness of directives on the basis of the theoretical approaches in the literature to objectify the comparison of directive forms.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Discourse Analysis, Females, Interaction Process Analysis
Larsen, Vernon W.; Wright, H. Curtis – 1986
Symbolic interactionism is a theoretical framework that derives from critical humanism through social psychology and is presented as an alternative to sociological and psychological views of social reality. This paper analyzes the general arguments of symbolic interactionism, its portrayal of people as responsible agents, and its interpretive…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Interaction Process Analysis, Language Usage, Organizational Theories
Linde, Charlotte – 1975
Speech errors have been used in the construction of production models of the phonological and semantic components of language, and for a model of interactional processes. Errors also provide insight into how speakers plan discourse and syntactic structure,. Different types of discourse exhibit different types of error. The present data are taken…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns
Waite, Duncan – 1991
This report describes a "culturally contexted" conversation analysis approach to the study of naturally occurring speech in supervisory conferences. The supervisors and teachers were participants in a graduate program for beginning teachers, and the conference's purpose was supervisory evaluation of teachers' classroom performances. Ethnographic…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Conferences, Discourse Modes, Elementary Secondary Education
Farrar, Mary Thomas – 1985
In a sociolinguistic study of five transcripts of high school discussions, two analyses were conducted. The first was a detailed qualitative analysis of the data, which combined paralinguistic features with three perspectives: a speech act analysis, a conversation analysis, and an interaction analysis. In the second, more quantitative analysis,…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Group Discussion, Interaction
Kluwin, Thomas N. – 1979
Methods used in studies of the classroom language of the English teacher are described in this paper and some results of the research are reported. The paper first describes three methods traditionally employed in the description of the language of the English classroom--live observation systems, coding systems based on transcripts, and…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Classroom Communication, Educational Research, English Instruction
Kochman, Thomas – 1979
After describing scenes that reveal a pattern in which whites regard blacks' speech behavior as threatening, aggressive, or hostile, and in which blacks disagree with their interpretation, this paper explores differences between black and white cultural assumptions, values, and conventions of aggressive behavior to account for the different…
Descriptors: Aggression, Black Attitudes, Black Culture, Communication Problems
Shuy, Roger W. – 1975
Persons from minority groups often are at a linguistic disadvantage in (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Nov. 22, 1975) the language and culture of the physician or psychoanalyst, who may be unaware of problems of understanding. Patients have certain language rights in medical care. (1) The right to human dignity in the medical relationship is…
Descriptors: Civil Liberties, Communication Problems, Communication Skills, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Abruzzese, Anthony A. – 1979
Educational cognitive style refers to a person's preferred ways of gathering meaning from surroundings. It involves four groups of behaviors: receiving, expressing, reasoning, and handling the receiving/expressing in specific settings or modalities. A comparison of communication and educational cognitive style shows that several ideas are common…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Communication Skills, Communication (Thought Transfer), English Instruction
Pinnell, Gay Su – 1977
The many ways in which children use language are examined in this paper, and classroom implications are outlined. The first part of the paper discusses such topics as young children's focus on meaning in language, teachers' tendency to examine language in terms of form rather than meaning, and the importance of the student/teacher interaction…
Descriptors: Child Language, Classroom Environment, Early Childhood Education, Interaction
Collins, James L.; Seidman, Earl – 1978
True learning requires that students "make meaning" for themselves, but the patterns of verbal behavior that prevail in secondary classrooms tend to stifle rather than facilitate this process. Excerpts from tape recordings of lessons in three secondary classrooms show that, whereas the teachers display great autonomy and control over what they…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Communication (Thought Transfer), Concept Formation, Educational Problems
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