746 resultados para Spanish language -- Study and teaching (Secondary)
Resumo:
El libro contiene cuatro tests prácticos completos con formato de examen para el ejercicio 2 de la prueba Cambridge IGCSE (International General Certificate of Secondary Education) de inglés como segundo idioma. Los tests permiten desarrollar las técnicas de examen de los alumnos familiarizándose con el formato de los ejercicios de lectura, compresión y escritura, y con el tipo de temas que pueden encontrar en el examen oficial. El nivel de la prueba es intermedio e intermedio-alto.
Resumo:
El libro contiene cuatro tests prácticos completos con formato de examen para el ejercicio 2 de la prueba Cambridge IGCSE (International General Certificate of Secondary Education) de inglés como segundo idioma. Los tests permiten desarrollar las técnicas de examen de los alumnos familiarizándose con el formato de los ejercicios de lectura, compresión y redacción, y con el tipo de temas y textos que pueden encontrar en el examen oficial. El nivel de la prueba es intermedio e intermedio-alto. Incluye las respuestas de los tests y redacciones de ejemplo.
Resumo:
Dos CDs audio aprobados por la Universidad Cambridge International Examinations para la preparación del examen IGCSE (International General Certificate of Secondary Education) en la asignatura de 'Inglés como segundo idioma', y para ser usados junto al libro de texto 'Listening and speaking revised edition (Book 1)'. Los tests de compresión auditiva permitirán a los alumnos practicar la identificación de información concreta, la toma de notas esquemáticas y la compresión de significados, opiniones y actitudes más complejas.
Resumo:
Dos CDs audio aprobados por la Universidad Cambridge International Examinations para la preparación del examen IGCSE (International General Certificate of Secondary Education) en la asignatura de 'Inglés como segundo idioma', y para ser usados junto al libro de texto 'Listening and speaking book 2'. Contienen cuatro tests de compresión oral y auditiva que permitirán a los alumnos practicar la identificación de información concreta, la toma de notas esquemáticas y la compresión de significados, opiniones y actitudes más complejas.
Resumo:
Dos CDs audio aprobados por la Universidad Cambridge International Examinations para la preparación del examen IGCSE (International General Certificate of Secondary Education) en la asignatura de 'Inglés como segundo idioma' de nivel básico, y para ser usados junto al libro de texto 'Listening and speaking revised edition (book 1)'. Los tests de compresión oral y auditiva permitirán a los alumnos practicar la identificación de información concreta, la toma de notas esquemáticas y la compresión de significados, opiniones y actitudes más complejas.
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The following contribution pretends to cope with the demands of a globalised, post-modern environment through the design and implementation of an online international project where an SNS is used in order to join English as Second Language (ESL) students from different parts of the world. The design of the project appears around the implementation of the Bologna process in the Faculty of Education from the University of Girona where the basic prerequisite of all students to acquire English at the level B1 of the Common European Portfolio makes English a compulsory competence for communication among its higher education candidates in order to develop in the world. Together with the University of Girona, there is the International Educational and Resources Network (iEARN) which promotes the participation of schools around the world in online international projects
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This paper includes a course of study for teaching hearing impaired children about the use of TTY/TDD.
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This study examines the purpose and uses of Cued Speech, its benefits and limitations, and its effectiveness as a tool for language, literacy, and bilingualism.
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This paper includes a course of study for teaching hearing impaired children about the use of TTY/TDD.
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This study discusses the importance of parental involvement in children’s language development, and the related project offers parents books and activities to assist them in developing their children’s linguistic skills.
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This paper draws on ethnographic case-study research conducted amongst a group of first and second generation immigrant children in six inner-city schools in London. It focuses on language attitudes and language choice in relation to cultural maintenance, on the one hand, and career aspirations on the other. It seeks to provide insight into some of the experiences and dilemmatic choices encountered and negotiations engaged in by transmigratory groups, how they define cultural capital, and the processes through which new meanings are shaped as part of the process of defining a space within the host society. Underlying this discussion is the assumption that alternative cultural spaces in which multiple identities and possibilities can be articulated already exist in the rich texture of everyday life amongst transmigratory groups. The argument that whilst the acquisition of 'world languages' is a key variable in accumulating cultural capital, the maintenance of linguistic diversity retains potent symbolic power in sustaining cohesive identities is a recurring theme.
Resumo:
Specific language impairment (SLI) is usually defined as a developmental language disorder which does not result from a hearing loss, autism, neurological and emotional difficulties, severe social deprivation, low non-verbal abilities. Children affected with SLI typically have difficulties with the acquisition of different aspects of language and by definition, their impairment is specific to language and no other skills are affected. However, there has been a growing body of literature to suggest that children with SLI also have non-linguistic deficits, including impaired motor abilities. The aim of the current study is to investigate language and motor abilities of a group of thirty children with SLI (aged between 4 and 7) in comparison to a group of 30 typically developing children matched for chronological age. The results showed that the group of children with SLI had significantly more difficulties on the language and motor assessments compared to the control group. The SLI group also showed delayed onset in the development of all motor skills under investigation in comparison to the typically developing group. More interestingly, the two groups differed with respect to which language abilities were correlated with motor abilities, however Imitation of Complex Movements was the unique skill which reliably predicted expressive vocabulary in both typically developing children and in children with SLI.
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Non-word repetition (NWR) was investigated in adolescents with typical development, Specific Language Impairment (SLI) and Autism Plus language Impairment (ALI) (n = 17, 13, 16, and mean age 14;4, 15;4, 14;8 respectively). The study evaluated the hypothesis that poor NWR performance in both groups indicates an overlapping language phenotype (Kjelgaard & Tager-Flusberg, 2001). Performance was investigated both quantitatively, e.g. overall error rates, and qualitatively, e.g. effect of length on repetition, proportion of errors affecting phonological structure, and proportion of consonant substitutions involving manner changes. Findings were consistent with previous research (Whitehouse, Barry, & Bishop, 2008) demonstrating a greater effect of length in the SLI group than the ALI group, which may be due to greater short-term memory limitations. In addition, an automated count of phoneme errors identified poorer performance in the SLI group than the ALI group. These findings indicate differences in the language profiles of individuals with SLI and ALI, but do not rule out a partial overlap. Errors affecting phonological structure were relatively frequent, accounting for around 40% of phonemic errors, but less frequent than straight Consonant-for-Consonant or vowel-for-vowel substitutions. It is proposed that these two different types of errors may reflect separate contributory mechanisms. Around 50% of consonant substitutions in the clinical groups involved manner changes, suggesting poor auditory-perceptual encoding. From a clinical perspective algorithms which automatically count phoneme errors may enhance sensitivity of NWR as a diagnostic marker of language impairment. Learning outcomes: Readers will be able to (1) describe and evaluate the hypothesis that there is a phenotypic overlap between SLI and Autism Spectrum Disorders (2) describe differences in the NWR performance of adolescents with SLI and ALI, and discuss whether these differences support or refute the phenotypic overlap hypothesis, and (3) understand how computational algorithms such as the Levenshtein Distance may be used to analyse NWR data.
Resumo:
Oral language skills scaffold written text production; students with oral language difficulties often experience writing problems. The current study examines the ways in which oral language problems experienced by students with language impairment (LI) and students with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) impact on their production of written text. One hundred and fifty seven participants (Mage = 10;2) with LI or ASD completed standardized measures of oral language, transcription, working memory, and nonverbal ability and produced a written narrative text assessed for productivity, grammatical accuracy, and quality. Measures of transcription, productivity, and grammatical accuracy, but not text quality, were poorer for students with LI. Transcription skills accounted for the majority of variance in the writing of the LI cohort. For the ASD cohort, handwriting, oral language and autism symptomatology were significant predictors. When students with ASD also experienced language problems, their performance was equivalent to that observed in the LI cohort.