82 |
English as an International Language in Asia: Implications for language education
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83 |
Language choice as an index of identity: linguistic landscape in Dili, Timor-Leste
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84 |
The effects of geographic location and picture support on children's story retelling performance
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85 |
Timor-Leste: Sustaining and maintaining the national languages in education
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86 |
Mother tongue-based multilingual education: A new direction for Timor-Leste
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87 |
At the intersection of language assessment and academic advising: Communicating results of a large-scale diagnostic academic English writing assessment to student and other stakeholders
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88 |
Exlamatives and exclamatory acts in English and Vietnamese
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To, VT. - : Australia - Asia Research and Education Foundation, 2012
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89 |
Pedagogy, Citizenship and the EU: Practitioners' Perspectives on the Teaching of European Citizenship through Modern Foreign Languages
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90 |
Differing perspectives of non-native speaker students' linguistic experiences on higher degree courses
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91 |
Sampling and analysis of children's spontaneous language. From research to practice
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Abstract:
In clinical practice, most paediatric speech pathologists (SPs) deal with young clients with communication difficulties on a daily basis. Routine assessments generally include standardised tests of children's speech and/or language skills to determine the severity of the speech/language disorder, the eligibility for service, and the possible direction for intervention. Detailed assessment of children's language skills in more natural situations is used less frequently, however, as it may seem a relatively difficult and time-consuming task. This paper provides a brief overview of current empirical knowledge about spontaneous oral language sampling in preschool and school-aged children across a range of discourse genres, with particular emphasis on clinical applications in an Australian context. It urges practitioners to adopt language sample analysis on a routine basis to determine a child's baseline level of performance and to monitor the child's response to intervention in an ecologically valid way. ; No Full Text
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics; Lexicon; Linguistic Structures (incl. Grammar; Phonology; Semantics)
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10072/41931
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92 |
Shaping socialist ideology through language education policy for primary schools in the PRC
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95 |
Analyzing Students' Multimodal Texts: The product and the process
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96 |
Intercultural competence through language education in Australian higher education: Mission (im)possible?
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97 |
Timor-Leste: Sustaining and maintaining the national languages in education
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99 |
“Now my hope is clear for building my future”: How two young refugees build social connectedness
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