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Rowland, Charity – 1985
The paper examines the use of concrete symbol systems to make the transition from presymbolic to formal symbolic communication for deaf blind students. Comments focus on expressive use of concrete symbols and address two issues requiring further research: (1) the critical features of referent objects, concrete symbols, and concrete symbol arrays…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Deaf Blind, Expressive Language, Language Acquisition
Boliek-Uphoff, Carol; Obrzut, John E. – 1984
Twenty-three learning disabled (LD) children (age 8-12 years) and 15 nondisabled children (age 8-12 years) were individually administered the Luria-Nebraska Neuropsychological Battery-Children's Revision (LNNB). Means and standard deviations for each of the test's scales were computed by group, and individual T-tests were calculated for…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Expressive Language, Handicap Identification, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedSanchez-Rojas, Arturo – Hispania, 1974
Presents several socio-cultural contexts where both extremes of crudeness and euphemism are customary in everyday verbal communication. (TL)
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Figurative Language, Language Usage, Sociocultural Patterns
Alfonso, Martin – Yelmo, 1974
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Diachronic Linguistics, Etymology, Expressive Language
Peer reviewedJarvella, Robert J.; Lubinsky, Jay – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1975
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Deafness, Exceptional Child Research
Keith, Philip M. – 1978
Teaching composition as involving merely syntax and paragraph structure has no clear relation to an education in the liberal arts or to significant growth in understanding. Work in mechanics needs to be subordinated to the communicative and logological (how words act rather than their content) functions of language. One hopeful approach to…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Expressive Language, Grammar, Language Styles
Levine, Adina – 1980
Syntactic synonymy enables the speaker to use syntactic devices to say the same thing in a number of different ways. It is based on three criteria: (1) similarity of semantic content, (2) certain syntactic similarity between the components of the synonymous structures, and (3) differences in surface structures. The third criterion separates…
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Language Styles, Language Usage, Language Variation
PDF pending restorationCarr, Edward G. – 1978
The acquisition of expressive sign language was studied in four autistic children (ages 10-15 years). Ss were taught expressive sign labels for common objects using a training procedure consisting of prompting, fading, and stimulus totation. The signing of three of the Ss was found to be controlled solely by the visual cues associated with the…
Descriptors: Autism, Exceptional Child Research, Expressive Language, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedKlima, Edward S. – Cognition, 1976
Examines the form that poetic function assumes in American Sign Language, a language that has a structural organization different from oral languages and where the possibilities for poetic organization are radically different. Examples of a complex type of composition called art-sign distinguished by three levels of structure are analyzed.…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Art Song, Comparative Analysis, Expressive Language
Notebaart, James – Momentum, 1978
The author looks at some trends that mark our worship. He states that liturgical models are beginning to develop: models of hospitality, the faith of the community, the challenge of the gospel, or the otherness of God. (Author/KC)
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Environmental Influences, Expressive Language, Opinions
Branscomb, H. Eric – Today's Education, 1978
The writing style of many college students is deplorably florid; in the hope of sounding "educated" they use long words where short ones will do just as well. (JD)
Descriptors: College Students, Creative Writing, Expressive Language, Language Skills
Raver, Sharon A. – Journal of the Division for Early Childhood, 1987
The article discusses several linguistic and nonlinguistic teaching strategies to foster language acquisition and increase spontaneous language in preschool children with language delays. Techniques include having the child complete unfinished sentences and intentionally violating an expected routine to elicit the child's language. (DB)
Descriptors: Delayed Speech, Expressive Language, Language Acquisition, Language Handicaps
Peer reviewedGoldstein, Howard; And Others – Research in Developmental Disabilities, 1987
Matrix training strategies were used to teach three severely mentally retarded children syntactic rules for combining known words into two- and three-word utterances. Training only a limited number of responses was sufficient to promote recombinative generalization in the trained modality and transfer to untrained responses in the opposite…
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Generalization, Language Acquisition, Learning Modalities
Peer reviewedNewcomer, Phyllis L.; And Others – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1988
Using two modes of production, writing and dictation, the study compared the story production, coherence, and fluency of learning-disabled (LD) children (N=47) with that of normal-achieving and low-achieving subjects across three grade levels. Among results were that mode of production had no effect upon story production or fluency for any…
Descriptors: Dictation, Elementary Secondary Education, Expressive Language, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedHagen, Chris – Topics in Language Disorders, 1987
An approach to treating mild to moderately severe cases of the speech disturbance, apraxia, focuses on helping the patient establish a conscious knowledge of how an accurate response is produced through a five-phase training program. (DB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Expressive Language, Language Handicaps, Speech Handicaps


