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1
Clinical Forum - Contextual Variation, Familiarity, Academic Literacy, and Rural Adolescents' Idiom Knowledge
In: Language, speech and hearing services in schools. - Rockville, Md. : Assoc. 34 (2003) 1, 69-79
OLC Linguistik
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2
Contextual variation, familiarity, academic literacy, and rural adolescents' idiom knowledge
In: Language, speech and hearing services in schools. - Rockville, Md. : Assoc. 34 (2003) 1, 69-79
BLLDB
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3
Co-occurring disorders in children who stutter
In: Journal of communication disorders. - New York, NY : Elsevier 36 (2003) 6, 427-448
BLLDB
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4
Lexicalization of idioms in urban fifth graders : a reaction time study
In: Journal of communication disorders. - New York, NY : Elsevier 36 (2003) 4, 245-261
BLLDB
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5
Lexicalization of idioms in urban fifth graders: a reaction time study
In: Journal of communication disorders. - New York, NY : Elsevier 36 (2003) 4, 245-262
OLC Linguistik
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6
Co-occurring disorders in children who stutter
In: Journal of communication disorders. - New York, NY : Elsevier 36 (2003) 6, 427-448
OLC Linguistik
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7
Literacy: What Matters? Reading First: Cautions and Recommendations
In: Language arts. - Urbana, Ill. : Council 81 (2003) 1, 28-33
OLC Linguistik
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8
Two collaborating artists produce a work of art. The medical interview
In: Archives of Internal Medicine 163 (2003) 10, 1131-1132
IDS Bibliografie zur Gesprächsforschung
9
Bila (D32)
In: The Bantu languages (London [etc.], 2003), p. 450-474
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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10
A pilot study of supplemental instruction for at-risk students at an historically black university (HBU) in South Africa
In: Africa and applied linguistics (Amsterdam, 2003), p. 52-61
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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11
Co-occurring disorders in children who stutter
In: http://www.csun.edu/%7Eainslab/readings/PastLabMembers/Keren/Blood_Co-occuring-disorders-in-children-who-stutter.pdf (2003)
BASE
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12
A pilot study of supplement instruction for at-risk students at an historically black university (HBU) in South Africa
In: International Association of Applied Linguistics. AILA review. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 16 (2003), 52-61
BLLDB
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13
Bila (D32)
Kutsch Lojenga, Constance. - : Routledge, 2003
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14
Bila (D32)
Kutsch Lojenga, Constance. - : Routledge, 2003
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15
Develop an orthography
Kutsch Lojenga, Constance. - : SIL International DigitalResources, 2003
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16
Laboratory Manual for Morphology and Syntax
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17
Introducing performance into the communication curriculum for engineers: Breaking the mould
In: Doctoral Dissertations (2003)
Abstract: Education in South Africa has, thankfully, not escaped the winds of change. The introduction of Outcomes-based Education (OBE) has generated much debate. How have technikons responded to the educational transformation impelled by sociopolitical change? I refer here specifically to the Communication curricula for engineers at Mangosuthu Technikon. This research explores the effects in my Communication classroom of introducing performance, through games and a dramatic text. My intention is to subvert the potential dangers of OBE, given its behaviourist and prescriptive thrust, and a possible reversion to the transmission model in its application at Mantec. I argue that gaps in the historically decontextualised Communication curriculum may be addressed through the use of performance as a critical alternate literacy and pedagogic tool. Government policy supports the view of literacy as an inclusive act, contrasting with the exclusionary politics characteristic of apartheid. Educators also offer a rationale for the use of literary texts in developing language competence. Vygotskian pedagogy, the social constructivist model of education and qualitative research methods condition this research. I consequently offer a comprehensive, multiperspectival view of the research experience my students and I shared during a semester, through a range of lenses and data collection tools. Many insights filtered through our experience. Students' journal reflections are captured throughout, and their capacity to demonstrate specified outcomes analysed. I saw in their presentations the beginnings of understanding of the power of performance and body language. Texts which raised issues relevant to their sociocultural, political and personal lives, were valued. Reading in class and performance techniques heightened participation and competence in comprehending, interacting and conversing. Students' culminating performances balanced a theoretical understanding with practical application, which drew on personal, political and sociocultural experiences. By the end of the semester, they exhibited more confidence in their own literacies and in building relationships. The study concludes that a collective effort, made at institutional level, is necessary if we are to succeed at educational transformation through the methodology of OBE. We need a more considered, critical application, and to still seek other alternatives.
Keyword: Curriculum and Instruction; Education; Speech Communication
URL: https://scholars.unh.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1127&context=dissertation
https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation/128
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18
Age, Working Memory, Figurative Language Type, And Reading Ability: Influencing Factors In African American Adults' Comprehension Of Figurative Language
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