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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
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
Peer reviewedHammarberg, 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)
Peer reviewedBurt, Marina K. – TESOL Quarterly, 1975
Descriptors: Adult Students, English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns
Monagle, E. Brette – 1981
The use of error pattern analysis can reduce the time and money spent on editing and correcting manuscripts. What is required is noting, classifying, and keeping a frequency count of errors. First an editor should take a typical page of writing and circle each error. After the editor has done a sufficiently large number of pages to identify an…
Descriptors: Editing, Efficiency, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns
Wescott, Alice Legenza; Knafle, June D. – 1979
The errors on cloze tests completed by 22 German adults who spoke English and 40 American college students were analyzed to determine whether predictable error patterns occurred. The results indicated predictable error patterns at the independent, instructional, and frustration reading levels for all the adults. The error profiles of the two…
Descriptors: Adults, Cloze Procedure, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns
Peer reviewedDell, Gary S. – Psychological Review, 1986
A theory of sentence production is presented that accounts for facts about speech errors, including (1) the kinds of errors that occur; (2) the constraints on their form; and (3) the conditions that precipitate them. Two simulation models are introduced to illustrate how the theory applies to phonological encoding processes. (Author/LMO)
Descriptors: Adults, Encoding (Psychology), Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns
Peer reviewedLevitt, Andrea G.; Healy, Alice F. – Journal of Memory and Language, 1985
Describes two experiments in which subjects read aloud pairs of nonsense syllables rapidly presented on a display screen or repeated the same syllables presented auditorily. Results support an explanation of the speech error generation process in which a segment's strength is a function of its frequency of occurrence in English. (SED)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Distinctive Features (Language), Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns
Peer reviewedThompson, G. Brian – Journal of Research in Reading, 1984
Concludes that there is no adequate support for recommending that teachers attempt to increase the incidence of a child's self-corrections when reading. (FL)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Oral Reading
Peer reviewedTaylor, C. V. – English Language Teaching Journal, 1976
Errors made by the foreign language learner are classified and discussed. (RM)
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Interference (Language), Language Instruction
Peer reviewedStansfield, Charles – System, 1976
A brief summary of this conference, focussing on foreign and second language testing, is given. Topics covered include: publishers' tests, semantic aspects of error analysis, factor analysis and language proficiency, learning style identification, the foreign language placement test of the U.S.A.F. Academy, assessment of language dominance, and…
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Factor Analysis, Language Instruction
Peer reviewedSmith, Karen L. – Hispania, 1982
Analyzes the omission, overgeneralization, and misuse errors in the compositions of first- through third-year university Spanish students, with major emphasis placed on the role errors play in the acquisition of Spanish as a second language. (EKN)
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Higher Education, Language Patterns
Porquier, Remy; Frauenfelder, Uli – Francais dans le Monde, 1980
Attitudes toward and approaches to error in language learning depend on one's point of view: strictly linguistic, pedagogical, or that of the learner. This last approach is that "one learns by making mistakes," and from that perspective, there is no absolute definition of error, but only an operative one. (MSE)
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Learning Processes, Second Language Instruction
Peer reviewedVogindroukas, I.; Papageorgiou, V.; Vostanis, P. – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2003
Semantic or vocabulary errors were measured among 6 children with autism and mild learning disability (ages 7-8) and 6 with mild learning disability. Vocabulary errors were similar, except under extension, which was not used by children with autism. Children with autism tended to use all mechanisms in order to name something. (Contains…
Descriptors: Autism, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedConners, Robert J.; Lunsford, Andrea A. – College Composition and Communication, 1988
Describes the authors' error-frequency research, relating how they collected 19,615 teacher-marked student papers from the 1980s, analyzed them, and determined the major patterns of formal and mechanical error in current student writing. (SR)
Descriptors: College English, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Higher Education


