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Peer reviewedFeeny, Thomas P. – Foreign Language Annals, 1977
Dialogue learning as a tool in teaching conversational skills to lower-level language students is discussed. The use of an outline of the day's dialogue to assist the student to learn the material without complete memorization is recommended. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Higher Education, Language Instruction, Second Language Learning
Schwarz, Baruch; Dreyfus, Tommy; Hadas, Nurit; Hershkowitz, Rina – International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2004
This paper focuses on how teachers guide construction of knowledge in classrooms. We suggest that guidance hinges on the kind of dialogue teachers choose to engage students in. We propose several classroom dialogue types relevant for the construction of knowledge and suggest that critical dialogue is particularly effective for knowledge…
Descriptors: Grade 8, Teacher Guidance, Probability, Constructivism (Learning)
Peer reviewedAlexander, Loren; Butzkamm, Wolfgang – British Journal of Language Teaching, 1983
A teaching method is described and illustrated that begins with the presentation of a basic dialogue containing new learning material and progresses to the group's acting out its own dialogues and discussing them with the class. The objective is to lead learners from understanding new material to using it creatively and, ultimately, for their own…
Descriptors: Course Organization, Curriculum Development, Dialogs (Language), Role Playing
Peer reviewedHowatt, A. P. R. – ELT Journal, 1983
The first text for teaching English to French speakers was a 1483 book of dialogues, translated from French and Flemish. The content consists of everyday vocabulary, interactions, and trading situations. The situational dialogue method lost favor in the nineteenth century and has only recently re-emerged among teaching techniques. (MSE)
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Educational History, English (Second Language), French
Peer reviewedBishop, Russell H. – Hispania, 1980
In an attempt to make dialog learning in a FLES Spanish class easier, the use of the "integrated story" is suggested that exposes the children to new phrases and sentences of the dialog prior to the formal introduction of the dialog. (NCR)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Dialogs (Language), FLES, Second Language Instruction
Peer reviewedMiller, Kevin J.; Luckner, John L. – American Annals of the Deaf, 1992
This paper offers a rationale for the use of conversational approaches to teach language to deaf students, encourages teachers to reexamine how they teach and how they structure their classrooms and curriculums, and describes activities that teachers can use to encourage conversation in their classrooms. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Connected Discourse, Deafness, Dialogs (Language)
Peer reviewedLease, Judy E.; McConnell, Renee V.; Nord, Martha – Journal of Management Education, 1999
Discusses the role of language and dialog in effecting change and illustrates the power of language in effecting change. Uses the examples of student profiles to define and activate learning, and work portfolios to define career/life choices. (JOW)
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Career Choice, Change Agents, Dialogs (Language)
Peer reviewedHemmings, Annette – American Educational Research Journal, 2000
Describes democratic dialogues in the context of a public high school by a history teacher and an English teacher who facilitated contrasting dialogues of public "in-powerment" and self/community empowerment. Analyzes these dialogues in terms of liberal and radical frameworks for praxis and shows the effects of school contextual factors.…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Democracy, Dialogs (Language), Educational Environment
Cannon, Patrick – College Teaching, 2006
Group discussion allows students to learn how to "talk to someone." Through group discussion, students can acquire or refine a broad range of attributes, from basic oratory skills to a more sophisticated development of communicative competence to embracing and valuing dialogic interchange and reflexivity. In this article, the author explains how…
Descriptors: Group Discussion, International Relations, Course Content, Teaching Methods
Radford, Julie; Ireson, Judy; Mahon, Merle – Language and Education, 2006
Asymmetry in classroom discourse, typified by teachers' frequent use of inauthentic initiating question turns, does not afford the best opportunities for the learning of language skills. More favourable conditions would appear to be associated with collaborative discourse patterns that display genuine interest in the child's contribution and build…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Language Skills, Visual Aids, Class Activities
Haneda, Mari – Canadian Modern Language Review, 2005
This article argues that "triadic dialogue" (Lemke, 1990), much criticized in the past, has an important role to play in L2 learning and that its effectiveness should be judged in accordance with the particular pedagogical goals that it is made to serve. Drawing on three recent studies of L2 classrooms in a variety of instructional settings, the…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Second Language Learning, Language Research, Dialogs (Language)
McAllister, Edmond L. – Journal of the Association of Teachers of Japanese, 1977
The current approach in teaching Japanese as a second language is questioned as inefficient. The forward-looking approach does not condition students to expect that they must learn all the items of a set before being able to learn anything else. (HP)
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Grammar, Higher Education, Japanese
Peer reviewedMaher, Frances A. – Journal of Education, 1987
Neither liberation pedagogy nor feminist theories of women's development, taken by themselves, is adequate to produce a feminist pedagogy that fully challenges the androcentric universals of conventional teaching practices. By synthesizing the two approaches, however, feminist pedagogy can be developed in a way that will influence contemporary…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Dialogs (Language), Discussion (Teaching Technique), Educational Theories
Peer reviewedBabel: International Journal of Translation, 1985
The first article discusses three types of pair work activities in language classes: (1) role play, (2) "social interaction," and (3) "information gap." The second article describes semiscripted dialogues and dialogues that indicate the structure and direction of the discourse, but allow the speakers to improvise their language as they proceed.…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Dialogs (Language), Learning Activities, Listening Comprehension
Peer reviewedPopkin, Debra – Foreign Language Annals, 1985
Discusses the use of student journals in a second-semester university French class. Students write informally in their journals about topics that are of personal interest to them. The instructor then writes comments about the topic and also corrects the vocabulary, grammar, and idiomatic errors of each journal entry. (SED)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Dialogs (Language), Diaries, French

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