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Morphological Analysis Training for English Language Learners With Reading Difficulties
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22 |
The children's acquisition of shenme in Mandarin Chinese
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Liao, Min. - : Sydney, Australia : Macquarie University, 2014
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Design and Evaluation of English Oral Communication Course at Kansai University
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Journey to the syllables’ world : intervention in phonological awareness
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25 |
MELODÍAS EN EL PROCESO DE DESARROLLO DE LA CAPACIDAD LECTORA
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In: Tonos Digital; NÚMERO 25 - JULIO 2013 (2013)
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Els usos interpersonals o privats. Balanç i perspectives de futur ; Interpersonal or private language uses in Catalonia. A balance and future prospects
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In: Treballs de Sociolingüística Catalana; Núm. 22 (2012): Els usos lingüístics a Catalunya: un estat de la qüestió; 59-72 (2013)
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Apprendre une langue : les enjeux du « jeu intérieur »
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In: Langages, N 192, 4, 2013-12-01, pp.119-130 (2013)
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28 |
Developing phonemic awareness skills and reading readiness in kindergarten children
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29 |
The acquisition of differential object marking in L2 Spanish learners
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31 |
A formative study of rhythm and pattern: semiotic potential of multimodal experiences for early years readers
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32 |
Beyond orality and literacy : reclaiming the sensorium for composition studies
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Abstract:
In this dissertation I conduct a historical and theoretical reexamination of Walter Ong in order to explore the extent to which technology transforms consciousness. I discover within his work an understanding of literacy, technology, and humanity that can help us negotiate change without succumbing to the teleological urge to dichotomize. Technology transforms consciousness, but consciousness also transforms technology. This relational aspect of evolutionary change, which is essential to Ong’s work, is often missed or misread. The misreadings obscure important concepts in Ong’s work that can help us negotiate questions that occupy our own present and near-future. How do we teach writing in the presence of technology? What is literacy becoming and how can we understand the increasing multiplicity? Are our students being transformed by the latest technologies? Ong’s work offers answers in a somewhat unexpected way. Rather than continuing or redefining the orality, literacy, secondary orality continuum, I demonstrate that Ong’s work is grounded in more relevant concepts that should no longer be overlooked. A deeper understanding of “the word,” “interior,” and “presence” leads to the revelation that understanding “noetic economy” and “sensorium” not only clarifies Ong’s work, but also offers tools for transforming pedagogy, understanding literacies, and advancing historical understandings. Ong’s work is an enactment of scholarship within the sensorium. That enactment was somewhat unconscious; he did not always articulate the interaction of aural, oral, visual, kinesthetic, olfactory, and tactile, but merely referred to the human sensorium to explain the interactions of the physical and intellectual aspects of human existence. This recovery of Ong’s work demonstrates our need for conscious enactment of the sensorium. One such enactment includes rereading Alexander Bain, who failed to respond to the shifts in the human sensorium occurring alongside developments in writing technologies. Changes in the noetic economy shifted invention away from oral and memory-based composition towards visual and kinesthetically-enacted shaping and revising of ideas. Bain’s assumption that ideas come fully formed from the mind, shared with his students, became reified in current traditional pedagogy. Enacting the sensorium offers us an opportunity to avoid passing on problematic pedagogy to our own students. ; Department of English ; Walter Ong's reception in English studies -- Speaking of changes, or, "How the divide is not so great" -- Before orality and literacy : earlier explorations in Walter Ong's thought -- The (not so) great divide : recalling the sensorium -- Applications. ; Thesis (Ph. D.)
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Keyword:
Communication and technology; English language -- Rhetoric -- Study and teaching; Ong; Self-consciousness (Awareness); Senses and sensation; Walter J
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URL: http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/123456789/194706 http://liblink.bsu.edu/catkey/1637942
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33 |
Raising cultural awareness as part of EFL teaching in Japan
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Teachers' perceptions of the use of ASL phonological instruction to develop ASL and English literacy in an ASL/English bilingual preschool
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台灣國小學童音韻遷移現象之研究 ; CROSS-LANGUAGE TRANSFER of PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS in MANDARIN CHINESE-SPEAKING CHILDREN in TAIWAN
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36 |
English syllable confusion and imitation in Korean bilingual and monolingual children and adults
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Phonological awareness and explicit instruction in an EFL classroom
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In: CardinalScholar 1.0 (2009)
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Facilitating Word-Learning Abilities in Children with Specific Language Impairment ...
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Biliteracy effects on phonological awareness, oral language proficiency and reading skills in Taiwanese Mandarin-English bilingual children
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Facilitating Word-Learning Abilities in Children with Specific Language Impairment
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