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Gambell, Trevor J. – 1976
Sixth-grade students were subjects in a study to determine whether they possessed a repertoire of situational language in which registers or speech styles were differentiated by language use. A methodology was developed to elicit and describe children's language in different social settings that require different situational uses of language. Four…
Descriptors: Child Language, Code Switching (Language), Elementary Education, Grade 6
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Rosch, Eleanor; And Others – 1975
The categorizations which humans make of the concrete world are not arbitrary but highly determined. In taxonomies of concrete objects, there is one level of abstraction at which the most basic category cuts are made. Basic categories are those which carry the most information, possess the highest category cue validity, and are, thus, the most…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Child Language, Classification, Cognitive Processes
Keller, Joseph R. – 1968
This Outline is designed for students of the English language who have progressed beyond the introductory stage and are confronted by a variety of often conflicting texts. It is an attempt to provide a "comprehensive account of the fundamental coherence to be found among the major theories of linguistics" and an "appraisal of the cultural lags…
Descriptors: Child Language, Diachronic Linguistics, English, Grammar
Schwartz, Judy I. – 1978
Dialects have features of vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation that distinguish them from other varieties of a language; they exist in all languages and occur when members of one group communicate more among themselves than they do with speakers of another group. Black English vernacular (BEV) is a fully formed linguistic system with its own…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Beginning Reading, Black Dialects, Child Language
Wehren, Aileen; And Others – 1978
Research studies have demonstrated that children tend to define nouns by describing first their function and later the object to which they refer. In a study devised to trace the development of noun definition in the language of grade school children and adults, 20 subjects from each of four grade levels (kindergarten and grades two, four, and…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Definitions, Elementary School Students
Barnes, Alene; Asante, Molefi – 1977
A number of the historical and contemporary games of black children reflect an attitude of resistance and assertion on the part of the players. Older game songs, dating from the days of slavery, express a recreative anger against slave masters or a contempt for the theater image of the jolly plantation slave, Jim Crow. Post-Civil War songs and…
Descriptors: Assertiveness, Black Attitudes, Black Culture, Black Youth
Ghatala, Elizabeth S.; And Others – 1975
This study incorporated a correlational methodology into an experimental context to determine the functional components of rehearsal strategies in children's discrimination learning. The subjects for this study were 120 fifth- and sixth-grade children attending two elementary schools located in middle-class areas of Ogden, Utah. According to the…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Discrimination Learning, Educational Research
Kaplan, Eleanor L. – 1970
It is the contention here that the "prelinguistic" period is an important phase of the language acquisition process. Accordingly the research reported represents an attempt to begin mapping out the types of linguistically relevant information to which a young child attends. Specifically it is hypothesized that young children are…
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Child Language, Comprehension, Infants
Davison, Anni – 1974
Concomitant with a child's acquisition of phonological, syntactic, and semantic rules of an adult language is the need to learn pragmatic and contextual abilities for proper use of the language. As early language acquisition is closely allied with play, three children aged about 22 to 40 months were observed during play activities to determine…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Behavior Theories, Child Development, Child Language
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Vogel, Irene – 1975
Many researchers have assumed that adult bilinguals have separate systems for their two languages. Such an assumption raises interesting questions about how the two languages are acquired in the case of a child learning two languages simultaneously. This study attempts to determine whether the two languages are acquired separately right from the…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English
Keller-Cohen, Deborah – 1973
The purpose of this paper is to examine the status of deictic reference in the speech of 19 three-year-old Black children. The deictic verbs of motion are examined with reference to other aspects of the deictic system. The data for this study are approximately eight hours of spontaneous speech collected in a pre-school classroom. The hypothesis to…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns, Language Research
Rudegeair, Robert E. – 1972
The linguistic state-of-the-art relevant to the construction of a battery of tests intended to yield language proficiency profiles of preschool children is surveyed in this paper. A basic assumption is that language data can be structured with a model that reflects stages in the development of control over phonological features, morphological…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns, Language Proficiency
Berdan, Robert – 1972
A structured elicitation technique, convergent communication, was investigated as a means of constraining the range of linguistic data from children in K-3 without unduly constraining the naturalness of the conversation context. The convergent communication situation is a two-person problem-solving task which ensures that all communication is…
Descriptors: Child Language, Data Collection, Dialect Studies, Language Research
Leslie, Ronald Carl – 1975
This study presents an account of position saliency in terms of children's ability to utilize graphic information, and in particular the serial encoding of information from letters in a graphic pattern. By varying the number and position of the letters distinguishing graphic patterns (positive condition) in a short-term recognition memory (STRM)…
Descriptors: Child Language, Early Reading, Perceptual Development, Primary Education
Willis, Bruce – 1975
The study summarized in this paper deals with the grammatical analysis of the spontaneous speech of approximately 150 children who are classified as mentally disabled; educable (I.Q. range 50-80). The performance of these mentally disadvantaged children is compared with the performance of 200 normally developing children by using a clinical…
Descriptors: Child Language, Delayed Speech, Grammar, Language Acquisition
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