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Lam, H. C.; Ki, W. W.; Chung, A. L. S.; Ko, P. Y.; Lai, A. C. Y.; Lai, S. M. S.; Chou, P. W. Y.; Lau, E. C. C. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2004
Effective teaching should focus the attention of learners to its essential aspects. It follows that instructional software can be designed in such a way that allows learners to experience the important variations in the critical aspects of the content to be learned. This paper reports on the experience of designing such special kinds of…
Descriptors: Courseware, Instructional Effectiveness, Romanization, Chinese
Cheville, Julie – English Journal, 2004
The professional development organizations educate the local decision-makers by reducing the risks of automated scoring technologies to language and writing practices. These automated assessments lead to changes, which benefits private industry and conflicts with research on writing and language.
Descriptors: Scoring, Test Scoring Machines, Writing Exercises, Educational Policy
Saxton, Matthew – Child Language Teaching and Therapy, 2005
This article reviews the nature and function of recasts, a well-documented way of responding to young children. The paper challenges the definition of recast and argues that it is too broad a category to be useful, either for theories of language development or for practice. In particular, various forms of recast have featured in intervention…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Linguistic Input, Grammar, Child Language
Balasubramanian, V. – Brain and Cognition, 2005
Recent clinical observations, in the absence of experimental data, appear to suggest that written expression in conduction aphasics parallels their speech (Goodglass, 1992). The current study undertakes an analysis of word level writing in two conduction aphasics, and attempts to explore the posited 'parallel' relationship between speech…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Dysgraphia, Tests, Semantics
Tate, Richard L. – Applied Measurement in Education, 2004
The valid provision of subscores from an item response theory-based test implies a multidimensional test structure. Assuming, in the construction of a new test, that the test features required for a valid and reliable total test score have been specified already, this article describes the resulting subscore performance and the resulting…
Descriptors: Scores, Test Items, Item Response Theory, Test Construction
The Impact of Frontal and Non-Frontal Brain Tumor Lesions on Wisconsin Card Sorting Test Performance
Goldstein, B.; Obrzut, J. E.; John, C.; Ledakis, G.; Armstrong, C. L. – Brain and Cognition, 2004
Several lesion and imaging studies have suggested that the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) is a measure of executive dysfunction. However, some studies have reported that this measure has poor anatomical specificity because patients with either frontal or non-frontal focal lesions exhibit similar performance. This study examined 25 frontal, 20…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Control Groups, Brain, Error Patterns
Henkel, Linda A. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
The impact of repeated and prolonged attempts at remembering on false memory rates was assessed in three experiments. Participants saw and imagined pictures and then made repeated recall attempts before taking a source memory test. Although the number of items recalled increased with repeated tests, the net gains were associated with more source…
Descriptors: Guessing (Tests), Recall (Psychology), Error Patterns, Visualization
Fiori, Carla; Zuccheri, Luciana – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2005
Pupils' mistakes, if suitably analysed, may give useful suggestions for improving the teaching/learning process of mathematics. We present here the main issues of an investigation on a population of 732 Italian pupils (9--12 years old), addressed to determine the typology of errors in performing written subtraction. We compared our results with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Subtraction, Error Patterns, Mathematics Instruction
Mitchell, Peter; Ropar, Danielle; Ackroyd, Katie; Rajendran, Gnanathusharan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
In 3 experiments the authors investigate how errors in perception produce errors in drawings. In Experiment 1, when Shepard stimuli were shown as a pair of tables, participants made severe errors in trying to adjust 1 part of the stimulus to match the other. When the table legs were removed, revealing a pair of parallelograms with minimal…
Descriptors: Experiments, Visual Stimuli, Visual Perception, Error Patterns
Zimmerman, Donald W. – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2004
It is well known that the two-sample Student t test fails to maintain its significance level when the variances of treatment groups are unequal, and, at the same time, sample sizes are unequal. However, introductory textbooks in psychology and education often maintain that the test is robust to variance heterogeneity when sample sizes are equal.…
Descriptors: Sample Size, Nonparametric Statistics, Probability, Statistical Analysis
Dinnsen, Daniel A.; Farris, Ashley W. – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2006
Certain phonological error patterns have been judged to be "unusual" or "idiosyncratic", posing a number of theoretical and clinical problems. This paper reconsiders an especially challenging case of an unusual error pattern documented by Leonard and Brown (1984). T (age 3;8) replaced all word-final consonants (except for labial stops) with [s]…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Phonology, Case Studies, Clinical Diagnosis
Sado Al-Jarf, Reima – Online Submission, 2007
An error corpus of deviant SVO structure was collected from the translation projects of students majoring in translation. Syntactic, semantic, pragmatic and discoursal criteria were used to judge the deviations. Percentages of interlingual and intralingual errors, the syntactic contexts in which subjects were misplaced, the strategies used to…
Descriptors: Word Order, Error Patterns, Translation, Arabic
Rispens, Judith; Been, Pieter – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2007
Background: Problems with subject-verb agreement and phonological (processing) skills have been reported to occur in children with specific language impairment (SLI) and in those with developmental dyslexia, but only a few studies have compared such problems in these two groups. Previous studies have claimed a causal relationship between…
Descriptors: Grammar, Phonology, Profiles, Hearing Impairments
Kay, Robin H. – Computers & Education, 2007
Little research has been done examining the role of errors in learning computer software. It is argued, though, that understanding the errors that people make while learning new software is important to improving instruction. The purpose of the current study was to (a) develop a meaningful and practical system for classifying computer software…
Descriptors: Computers, Spreadsheets, Computer Software, Learning Strategies
Morgan, Gary; Barrett-Jones, Sarah; Stoneham, Helen – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2007
A total of 1,018 signs in one deaf child's naturalistic interaction with her deaf mother, between the ages of 19 and 24 months were analyzed. This study summarizes regular modification processes in the phonology of the child sign's handshape, location, movement, and prosody. First, changes to signs were explained by the notion of phonological…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Young Children, Phonology, Sign Language

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