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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 reviewedMaratsos, Michael; Kuczaj, Stanley A. – Journal of Child Language, 1978
This article reviews and criticizes Fay's particular transformational descriptions as implausible. (Author/NCR)
Descriptors: Child Language, Error Analysis (Language), Grammar, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedMorsbach, Gisela – TESOL Quarterly, 1981
Presents study of Japanese- and German-speaking children who were tested on the Sentence Comprehension Test to investigate understanding of various English grammatical structures. Concludes that learning of English as a second language in a natural milieu seems to pass through stages similar to those exhibited by monolingual English children.…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Cross Cultural Studies, English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language)
Peer reviewedMervis, Carolyn B.; Pani, John R. – Cognitive Psychology, 1980
Two implications of best-example theory for category acquisition were tested using a set of artificial concrete object categories. Categories acquired from initial exposure to good exemplars were learned more easily and accurately. People learn the best exemplars are category members before learning the poor exemplars are category members.…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Error Analysis (Language)
Azzaro, Gabriele – Rassegna Italiana di Linguistica Applicata, 1989
Presents the results of an analysis of the acquisition of fricatives in 5 English children between the ages of 24 and 49 months. After giving an overview of the area of articulatory phonetics and citing previous research, data collection, scoring problems, and error analysis are discussed. (CFM)
Descriptors: Child Language, Consonants, English, Error Analysis (Language)
Peer reviewedMorgan, James L.; Travis, Lisa L. – Journal of Child Language, 1989
Examination of parental responses to their young children's (N=3) inflectional over-regularizations and wh-question auxiliary-verb omission errors suggested that two of the children's parents followed ill-formed utterances with expansions and clarification questions. Such corrective responses dropped out of children's input as they continued to…
Descriptors: Child Language, Error Analysis (Language), Feedback, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedLocke, John L.; Mather, Patricia L. – Journal of Child Language, 1989
Analysis of speech samples from four-year-old monozygotic and dizygotic twins revealed that the monozygotic twins were significantly more likely to misproduce the same sound on an articulation test than were dizygotic twins. The dizygotic twins were no more likely to share errors than were children who were both genetically and environmentally…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Child Language, Error Analysis (Language), Genetics
Peer reviewedOtomo, Kiyoshi; Stoel-Gammon, Carol – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1992
This study investigated developmental patterns of acquisition of the unrounded U.S. English vowels, by following 6 normally developing children from 22 to 30 months of age. Three classes of production errors were identified: intertrial production variability, context-sensitive substitutions, and context-free systematic substitution patterns.…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), English, Error Analysis (Language), Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedHua, Zhu; Dodd, Barbara – Journal of Child Language, 2000
Describes the phonological acquisition of 129 monolingual Putonghua-speaking children, aged 1.6 to 4.6 years. Children's errors suggested that Putonghua-speaking children master four elements of Putonghua syllables in this order: (1) tones; (2) syllable-initial consonants; (3) vowels; and (4) syllable-final consonants. Suggests that the saliency…
Descriptors: Child Language, Error Analysis (Language), Language Acquisition, Mandarin Chinese
Bowerman, Melissa – 1981
This study investigates the onset at periodic intervals in the age range of about two to five years of various kinds of recurrent and systematic errors in word choice and/or syntactic structure. Acquisitional processes and their implications are outlined. Sections address: (1) the kinds of processes that can be inferred to underlie errors…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Development, Error Analysis (Language), Language Acquisition
Kuczaj, Stan A., II – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1977
Spontaneous speech samples of 15 children were analyzed for appropriate and inappropriate use and nonuse of the past tense verbal inflection. It was found that: (1) two types of overgeneralization errors have acquisitional relevance; and (2) partial regularity blocks overgeneralization errors. Two hypotheses were not supported. (CHK)
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Error Analysis (Language)
Peer reviewedHochberg, Judith G. – Journal of Child Language, 1986
Three- and four-year-old children were asked to perform a judgement task in which they chose between incorrect English transitives and intransitives and their correct adult equivalents. Purely semantic or syntactic models fail to explain the findings as well as does a model based on semantic/syntactic transitivity. (SED)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English, Error Analysis (Language)
Peer reviewedKrahnke, Karl J.; Christison, Mary Ann – TESOL Quarterly, 1983
Reviews the results of research in language acquisition, interactional analysis, pragmatics, repair, error, and social and affective factors. Extracts four language teaching principles relating to acquisition activities in the classroom, the importance of affective factors, the communicative capacity of learners, and the nature and treatment of…
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Language Acquisition, Language Research, Pragmatics
Jaeger, Jeri J. – Lawrence Erlbaum Associates (Bks), 2005
The study of speech errors, or "slips of the tongue," is a time-honored methodology which serves as a window to the representation and processing of language and has proven to be the most reliable source of data for building theories of speech production planning. However, until "Kids' Slips," there has never been a corpus of such errors from…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Young Children, Morphology (Languages)
Peer reviewedWeaver, Constance – Language Arts, 1982
Finds that the proportion of sentence fragments remained fairly consistent across grade levels, with older students making more errors with more complex syntactic structures as they began to elaborate on ideas and use more subordinate elements. (RL)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Error Analysis (Language), Language Acquisition, Punctuation

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