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Sartain, Harry W. – 1981
To discover the truth about the extent of children's reading vocabularies, a project was undertaken at the Falk Laboratory School, University of Pittsburgh, to determine how many words first, second, and third grade children could recognize in print. A team of graduate students tabulated the words appearing in commonly used basal materials and in…
Descriptors: Basal Reading, Child Language, Childrens Literature, Computational Linguistics
Gentry, Larry – 1982
A study identified the homophones most commonly used in children's writing and showed how the relative use of specific homophones changes as writing skill develops. Homophones appearing in Rinsland's "A Basic Vocabulary of Elementary School Children," a vocabulary list compiled from a national sample of children's writing in grades 2…
Descriptors: Child Language, Elementary Secondary Education, Error Analysis (Language), Research Methodology
PDF pending restorationSchaefer, Ronald P. – 1979
Studies of the acquisition of word meaning and the semantic features involved have been mostly confined to noun categories and polar adjectives. Investigation of the semantic categories underlying verb forms has implications not only for theories of child language acquisition but also for theories of semantic structure in general. Experimental…
Descriptors: Adjectives, Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns
Kovac, Ceil; Cahir, Stephen R. – 1981
This series, designed for use in inservice teacher workshops, addresses the question, "How do children and teachers use language to get things done?" The transcribed classroom discourse presented and discussed in each volume illustrates functional language in a real context based on the videotaping of undoctored classroom events from…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Child Language, Classroom Communication, Discourse Analysis
Ratliff, Gerald Lee – 1979
Isolated examples of creative adaptation show that Jean Piaget's theories of childhood development provide the conscientious teacher with a veritable warehouse of innovative and thought-provoking principles with which to construct a meaningful foundation of language arts experimentation. The elementary Piagetian principles for evoking creativity…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Class Activities, Communication Skills
Pellegrini, A. D. – 1981
The intent of this study was to examine the development of three aspects of preschoolers' private speech: coefficients of egocentricism, the extent to which speech regulates actions, and the syntactic and semantic structures of individual utterances. Forty-one randomly chosen preschoolers (26 females, 15 males) were placed in three age groups (3,…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Language, Egocentrism, Language Acquisition
Nicassio, Frank J. – 1981
In order to establish an initial data source for elementary level home-based intervention programs, 18 dyads of second-graders and their parents were divided into three mutually exclusive achievement groups and observed while completing an instructional tool introduced into the home by the childs' school. Parent/child interactions were stimulated…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Child Language, Elementary Education, Grade 2
Baghban, Marcia – 1981
Children can acquire written language skills and abilities through the natural process by which they acquire oral language. If as infants, toddlers, and preschoolers, children are exposed to rich print environments, they transfer assumptions from experiences with oral dialogue to the more focused situations of print. Discrepancies in the ease with…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Child Language, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Winner, Ellen; Gardner, Howard – 1981
Over a three-year period, researchers at Harvard Project Zero investigated metaphoric abilities in children, documenting the development of their metaphoric production, comprehension, and preference, as well as the interrelationships among these skills. Two other areas of literary skills that were investigated were the child's understanding of…
Descriptors: Child Language, Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education, Figurative Language
Winkeljohann, Rosemary – 1978
To ascertain what type of environment exists in elementary classrooms in the United States to stimulate oral language, questionnaires were mailed to 500 classroom teachers. Data from the 412 respondents indicated that 83% believed their college courses in language arts had not prepared them to encourage the development of children's language, and…
Descriptors: Child Language, Educational Practices, Elementary Education, Language Acquisition
Allen, George D. – 1976
This study discusses the nature of rhythm as it may apply to speech and language, reviews some of the literature on the development of rhythm, and presents some thoughts relating these findings to specific examples of children's speech. There is evidence to support the view that one need not look at the exact rhythm of any utterance, but only for…
Descriptors: Child Language, Intonation, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns
More, John Blake – 1978
Studies on the acquisition of relative clauses are reviewed. Two polarities among a variety of possible approaches are: Slobin's (1971) study that emphasizes acquisition process and learning strategies, and studies like Sheldon's (1974) that emphasize the linguistic structures involved. Early proposals that children experience more difficulty in…
Descriptors: Child Language, Grammar, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
Macken, Marlys A. – 1976
Data are presented from one subject (J) that show a gradual development of the complexity of words in terms of syllable structure and degree of phonetic similarity of co-occurring consonants. During the age range of 1;9 to 2;6, J's data show a highly systematic progression of stages, each characterized by fewer restrictions on the number, order,…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Development, Consonants, Imitation
PDF pending restorationLivingston, Kenneth R. – 1979
A theoretical distinction is made between the growth of word meaning and the development of word sense in Vygotsky's terms. A recall from semantic memory task and the semantic differential were used to operationalize these two conceptions of meaning in a study of 72 children aged 5 to 10 years. Results replicated typical findings for the growth of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Language, Developmental Vocabulary, Language Acquisition
Clumeck, Harold – 1977
The first part of this bibliography contains annotations of articles on the acquisition of voice onset time (VOT) as the marker of a phonological contrast, that is, the studies concern children who are already developing a phonological system. The most common questions are the following: (1) When children begin to produce initial stops, how are…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Child Language, Infants, Language Acquisition


