• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 12
  • 8
  • 8
  • 8
  • 8
  • 8
  • 8
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 32
  • 32
  • 32
  • 32
  • 15
  • 11
  • 8
  • 8
  • 7
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

A study of the status of modern and ancient languages in the high schools of Kansas

Hottell, Marion Ray January 1938 (has links)
Typescript, etc.
12

An investigation on the language structures in beginning readers compared with the language structures taught for oral proficiency in the teaching of English as a second language in the Philippines.

Maminta, Rosario E. January 1969 (has links)
The major assumption underlying this investigation was that pupils learning English as a second language read more effectively if beginning reading materials consist of language structures which are taught in the oral language program. It was believed that structures learned in the oral language course would reinforce reading skills and vice versa. Research evidence based on modern linguistic theory has indicated that patterns of form and arrangement of words, not words in isolation alone, contribute to meaning. It has also been shown that comprehension is a function of the degree of similarity between the language structures learned orally and the language structures used in the reading passage. The present study analyzed and compared the language structures in the beginning readers with the language structures which are taught for oral proficiency in the teaching guides for English used in Philippine schools. The T-unit, which is the shortest grammatically independent segment of language, consisting of one independent clause and all subordinate clauses attached to it was the basis of syntactic analysis and measurement. The language samples from the oral language guides and the reading texts were analyzed and compared on two levels. The first-level analysis was concerned with the underlying basic patterns and the length of the T-units as well as other related structural features. The second level analysis determined the kinds and number of constructions produced by sentence-combining transformations. The analysis of data revealed that there was a close similarity between the kinds of basic patterns which occurred in the oral language materials and in the readers. The frequency of occurrence centered around a few commonly used patterns. There were relatively more rare patterns in the reading passages than in the oral language materials. The length of the T-unit in the readers was greater than in the oral language materials. The greater length of the T-unit in the reading texts was due to the greater number of subordinate clauses and non-clausal constructions produced by sentence-combining transformations. The kinds and functions of constructions resulting from sentence-combining transformations which occurred with highest frequencies in the reading texts were similar to those in the oral language materials. But the data also indicated that types of rare constructions occurred more frequently in the reading passages than in the oral language materials. The greater number of sentence-combining transformations reflects greater complexity of language structures in the reading passages compared to the language structures in the oral language materials. This finding suggests that when the Filipino pupil begins to read English, his oral language background seems inadequate to cope with the difficulty level related to the complexity of structures of his reading materials. Further investigations are necessary to provide more useful guidelines for evolving effective reading materials in second language teaching. Suggested follow-up studies in second language classroom situations include comparison of comprehension between commonly used patterns and rare patterns, an investigation to establish a hierarchy of difficulty of the different kinds of sentence-combining transformations, and a quantitative study to determine the relationship of comprehension to the number of transformations in a reading passage. / Education, Faculty of / Graduate
13

Public examinations and languages in Ireland’s post-primary curriculum, 1878-1989

Cheevers, Carol January 1992 (has links)
Note:
14

A comprehensive integrated computer simulation of the injection molding process for thermoplastics /

Chu, Edward F.-H. January 1992 (has links)
Note:
15

A CALL-based approach to optimizing reading-based vocabulary acquisition /

Ghadirian, Sina January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
16

Modern languages as emerging curricular subjects in England, 1864-1918

Bayley, Susan Nancy January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
17

Uma análise sobre as noções adjetivas : implicações para o ensino e aprendizagem de línguas /

Zambon, Taísa Biagiolli. January 2019 (has links)
Orientador: Cássia Regina Coutinho Sossolote / Banca: Marília Blundi Onofre / Banca: Denise Maria Margonari / Resumo: Este trabalho apresenta uma reflexão sobre a construção de noções adjetivas seguida de uma análise dessas noções para o ensino e aprendizagem de línguas. Nosso embasamento é a Teoria das Operações Predicativas e Enunciativas - TOPE - de Antoine Culioli. Essa teoria possui um caráter dinâmico na medida que considera linguagem e língua articuladas, sendo a linguagem uma atividade significante a que temos acesso a partir das línguas, em um trabalho de montagem e desmontagem de arranjos, significados e valores constituídos pelas operações de representação, referenciação e regulação (CULIOLI, 2000). A partir desse embasamento teórico, analisamos atividades gramaticais que focalizam o estudo dos adjetivos e substantivos buscando compreender o processo de constituição dessas noções adjetivas. Partindo da TOPE, consideramos que os sentidos são produzidos nos e pelos enunciados orais e escritos e que a gramática e o léxico devem ser articulados. Com isso, nos afastamos de uma concepção de categorias estáticas e propomos que uma reflexão dessas atividades a partir de um viés enunciativo demonstra contribuições para o ensino e aprendizagem de línguas (REZENDE, 2000; ONOFRE, 2003b). Nosso trabalho possui uma natureza qualitativa e sua metodologia compreende a formulação de glosas e paráfrases. / Abstract: This work presents a reflection about the construction of adjective notions followed by an analysis of these notions for the languages teaching and learning. Our theoretical basis is Antoine Culioli's Theory of Predictive and Enunciative Operations - TOPE. This theory has a dynamic character in the measure that it considers articulated idiom and language, being the language a significant activity to which we have access from the idioms, in a work of assembly and disassembly of arrangements, meanings and values constituted by the operations of representation, referencing and regulation (CULIOLI, 2000). From this theoretical background, we analyze grammatical activities that focus on the study of adjectives and nouns seeking to understand the process of constitution of these adjective notions. Starting from the TOPE, we consider that the meanings are produced in and by the oral and written statements and that grammar and lexicon must be articulated. Thus, we move away from a conception of static categories and propose that a reflection of these activities under an enunciative view demonstrates contributions to the languages teaching and learning (REZENDE, 2000; ONOFRE, 2003b). Our work has a qualitative nature and its methodology includes the formulation of glosses and paraphrases. / Mestre
18

CAUSES OF UNSUCCESSFUL CONTINUATION OF FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY FROM HIGH SCHOOL TO COLLEGE

Woloshin, David J. January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
19

Me Llamo Lenika

Smith, Karina Yarwood. January 2008 (has links)
Educating language minority children in Canada is becoming increasingly challenging as our population becomes more and more diverse. Determining the best educational policy to help immigrant children learn English or French, while furthering their knowledge of core subject material has long been a difficult task for educators in the public system. This novel is a fictional account of an immigrant girl's first year in an Ontario elementary school. Through her experience, I describe a language policy whereby children have access to bilingual primary education no matter what their first language is. Two-way immersion is offered for language minority groups with significant numbers of students within a district. And, in collaboration with the community, first language support in school is given to students of all language backgrounds. I propose a teacher training programme that better prepares teachers for the linguistic diversity in their classrooms and promotes foreign language learning in teachers themselves. Children under this system are able to acquire the dominant language of society, learn the subject material, and continue to develop literacy skills in their first language. With such policies in place, I argue, Canada could be a world leader in bilingual education for diverse populations.
20

Attitudes toward second language among anglophone and francophone military personnel

Browning, Mary Jean January 1979 (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.1475 seconds