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Anderson, Edward
Teachers' lack of understanding and knowledge about language and dialects has resulted in unfavorable attitudes and poor instruction in the community college composition classroom. Students' attitudes about the relationship between language and cultural background have been neglected and many Non-Standard English users have developed negative…
Descriptors: College English, Community Colleges, Course Content, English Education
Peer reviewedGumperz, John J. – Language in Society, 1978
Analyzes an Afro-American sermon and a disputed speech by a Black political leader to mixed audience. Dialect alternants signal switching between contrasting styles in both. Conversational inference is shown to depend not only on grammar, lexical meanings, and conversational principles, but also on constellations of speech variants, rhythm, and…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Blacks, Code Switching (Language), Dialect Studies
Peer reviewedSeymour, Harry N.; Seymour, Charlena M. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1977
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Blacks, Communication (Thought Transfer), Conceptual Schemes
Peer reviewedFasold, Ralph W. – English Record, 1971
In language learning, the psychological factor of group reference is crucial. In its absence, the best efforts of the English teacher are ineffective. In its presence, nonstandard dialect speakers will learn standard English regardless of formal teaching. (JM)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), English Instruction, Group Membership, Language Handicaps
Peer reviewedAnderson, Edward – College English, 1981
A study of how employers responded to the language usage and language abilities of job applicants revealed that employers tended to favor males over females and persons using standard spoken usage over persons using nonstandard dialects. (RL)
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Employer Attitudes, Employment Interviews, Females
Peer reviewedGrobsmith, Elizabeth S. – Anthropological Linguistics, 1979
Lakota Indians use five speaking styles--formal and informal Lakota and three types of nonstandard English. Choice of style is determined by the social context and the individuals. Since the styles are used to meet specific linguistic and social needs, they are likely to be maintained simultaneously. (PMJ)
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, American Indians, Language Research, Language Styles
Peer reviewedIto, Takashi – Language Sciences, 1989
Reports on a sociolinguistic survey conducted in Tokyo, Japan, that explores the social factors that relate to the use of nonstandard expressions among younger people. Sex, media exposure, and friendship networks were found to influence language standardization. (25 references) (Author/OD)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Japanese, Junior High Schools, Language Research
Peer reviewedHagemann, Julie – English Journal, 2001
Discusses how and why a pedagogy of overt comparison between students' home language (vernacular dialects of English) and school language (standard English) helps students learn the more global features of academic writing and the more sentenced-level features of Standard English. Outlines a pedagogy of overt comparison. Notes it motivates…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Basic Writing, Bidialectalism, Bilingualism
Aldwin, Gail – Multicultural Teaching, 1996
The requirements for English language skills at the British Key Stage 2 curriculum level rise so steeply that it seems possible that many African Caribbean students may not be able to demonstrate their true competence. A rigid move toward standard English can be detrimental to minority group students. (SLD)
Descriptors: Black Students, British National Curriculum, Competence, English
Peer reviewedRiegelhaupt, Florencia; Carrasco, Roberto Luis – Bilingual Research Journal, 2000
A Chicana bilingual teacher from Arizona lived with a middle-class Mexican family during a 5-week Mexican immersion program. Her complaints about "harsh reactions" toward her and her Spanish showed how her use of a few stigmatized characteristics of nonstandard Spanish were judged by standard Spanish speakers to indicate an uneducated…
Descriptors: Bilingual Teachers, Case Studies, Foreign Countries, Immersion Programs
Papapavlou, Andreas; Pavlou, Pavlos – Current Issues in Language Planning, 2005
The acquisition, fostering and further development of literacy in bilingual situations has been widely studied but similar issues in bidialectal settings where nonstandard and standard languages coexist have not attracted sufficient attention. This is the second of a series of studies investigating the use of nonstandard languages or dialects in…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Language Planning, Nonstandard Dialects, Elementary Education
Grote, Ellen – Language and Education, 2006
Contemporary views of literacy as a wide range of sociocultural practices acknowledge a comprehensive account of adolescents' literate lives, which includes previously unrecognised vernacular literacies. Contrasting descriptors such as official/unofficial and sanctioned/unsanctioned have been used to describe adolescent writing from different…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Literacy, Cultural Pluralism, Indigenous Populations
Winters, Clyde A. – 1993
When children (particularly African Americans) have a different orthography, phonemic system, and deep structure from Standard American English (SAE) speakers, they may have difficulty grasping the correct SAE phonemes represented by the symbols and reading in general. Language acquisition is natural learning centered around the interaction of…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Hill, Clifford A. – 1977
During the past two decades the educational community has focused much attention on the language of urban minority children. Analytic positions set forth tend to assume varying degrees of either language deficit or language differences. The language deficit position is examined in this work from a sociolinguistic or psycholinguistic point of view.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Language Ability, Language Patterns, Language Skills
Darton, Andrew W., Jr.; Linville, Malcolm E. – 1977
This course is designed to give university students an introduction to the varying social and cultural backgrounds of students in inner city communities. Materials in the areas of literature, music, and history are assigned and presented to these future teachers. Class presentations are used to help students to broaden their perspectives and…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black History, Blacks, Ethnic Relations

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