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Peer reviewedMyers, Barbara; Goldstein, David – Psychology in the Schools, 1979
The cognitive development of lower-class English-speaking monolingual and English-Spanish speaking bilingual children in kindergarten, third, and sixth grades was compared by means of standard verbal and nonverbal measures. The verbal ability of bilingual children was assessed in both English and Spanish. Their scores in both languages were low.…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Child Language, Cognitive Development, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedRatner, Nancy; Bruner, Jerome – Journal of Child Language, 1978
The nature of early games and how they might assist the infant in language acquisition were explored in a longitudinal study of two mother-infant dyads, using video-recordings of their free play. The analysis of appearance and disappearance games was particularly revealing. (EJS)
Descriptors: Child Language, Games, Infants, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedRingler, Norma; And Others – Child Development, 1978
Descriptors: Child Language, Comprehension, Intelligence Quotient, Language Acquisition
Moskowitz, Breyne Arlene – Scientific American, 1978
Describes the different stages through which children learn to speak, how they break the language down into its simplest parts, and then develop the rules they need to put the parts together. (GA)
Descriptors: Child Language, Language, Language Learning Levels, Language Patterns
Peer reviewedBarrett, Martyn D. – Journal of Child Language, 1978
The hypothesis explains the early lexical development of children and the predictions of this hypothesis are shown to be consistent with available data on overextension. (Author/NCR)
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Lexicology, Perceptual Development
Peer reviewedGreenfield, Patricia M. – Journal of Child Language, 1978
This article clarifies the position taken in the Greenfield and Smith book (1976), including relation to speech act theory, and elucidates some general theoretical issues in early language development. (Author/NCR)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Development, Grammar, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedAtkin, Janet – English in Education, 1978
Discusses the characteristics of children's conversations, based on recording the conversations of three five-year-olds for a day, using radio microphones. (AA)
Descriptors: Child Language, Foreign Countries, Interaction, Language Usage
Peer reviewedPeters, Ann M. – Language, 1977
Reports on a child who evidently used a gestalt strategy (proceeding from the whole to the parts) in learning his first language. Further evidence for a gestalt strategy exists in the literature, albeit implicitly, and any theory of language or language acquisition should be able to account for it. (Author/KM)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition, Language Learning Levels
Peer reviewedLight, Timothy – Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 1977
The subject of this article is a Cantonese-speaking infant who arrived in the U.S. at 16 months. At 19 months, three striking anomalies marked her Cantonese speech. These anomalies are discussed; it is proposed that their origin may have been her new English-speaking environment. (CHK)
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Cantonese, Child Development, Child Language
Peer reviewedFay, David – Journal of Child Language, 1978
Kuczaj challenged the hypotheses that young children construct utterances by applying transformation rules to an abstract underlying structure. It is contended that Kuczaj's alternative hypotheses do not account for Hurford's data, and some of Kuczaj's new evidence actually supports the Transformational Hypothesis. (SW)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Peer reviewedGilbert, John H. V.; Johnson, Carolyn E. – Journal of Child Language, 1978
A preliminary study dealt with the ways in which children between six and seven years of age organize spoken language, specifically aspects of the temporal and segmental structure of polysyllabic English words containing the syllable C/jul/ (e.g., pediculous). (Author/SW)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Peer reviewedWelkowitz, Joan; And Others – Child Development, 1976
Tests the hypothesis that the extent to which the durations of pauses (silences within the utterances of a single speaker) and switching pauses (silences between the utterances of 2 speakers) in the speech of children in conversation become similar (i.e., exhibit conversational congruence) is positively related to age. (BRT)
Descriptors: Child Language, Developmental Psychology, Elementary School Students, Language Acquisition
Goldberg, Genevieve – Etudes de Linguistique Appliquee, 1977
A discourse analysis of sixty French children aged ten to twelve from two socioeconomic groups. The object of the study was to describe the syntactic-semantic functioning of their language in an "abstract" situation and to determine the degree of influence of socio-cultural factors. (Text is in French.) (AMH)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Child Language, Cultural Influences, Discourse Analysis
Peer reviewedTimm, Leonora A. – Journal of Child Language, 1977
This paper represents a partial condensation of the results of a study covering 14 months in a Russian-speaking child's phonological development. Evidence supports a theory of phonological acquisition formulated by Olmsted (1971), and offers detailed information on the child's acquisition of specific phones. (CHK)
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Peer reviewedPlatt, Penny – Reading Teacher, 1977
Children's drawings provide a natural introduction to reading and writing. (JM)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Child Language, Elementary Education, Graphic Arts


