960 resultados para LFG grammar and parsing
Resumo:
Recurso fotocopiable para enseñar gramática a estudiantes de siete a doce años. Incluye cincuenta y tres juegos y actividades con una duración entre veinte a sesenta minutos, para hacer a los niños divertido el aprendizaje. El texto incluye rompecabezas, juegos y crucigramas. Se divide en cuatro secciones: tres secciones de ampliación para los alumnos agrupados según las edades y el nivel, y la cuarta sección de crucigramas. Muchas de las actividades son apropiadas para la preparación de los alumnos para las pruebas de inglés del Cambridge Young Learners (Cambridge ESOL).
Resumo:
Es un recurso para los profesores que incluye una gran variedad de juegos sobre la lengua inglesa para realizar en el aula. Cada juego se centra en uno o varios puntos de la gramática y para cada uno de ellos se dan explicaciones sobre su nivel, los materiales necesarios, puntos de la gramática tratados y tiempo requerido.
Resumo:
Es un recurso para el profesor que contiene una colección de juegos sobre partes fundamentales de la gramática. Cada actividad se presenta con un resumen que especifica el área de la gramática tratada, el nivel al que se refiere, el tiempo requerido y el material necesario.
Resumo:
Este recurso para el profesor se organiza en dieciséis unidades temáticas, con más de cuarenta juegos y actividades para la práctica de la gramática, de forma intensiva e interactiva, con estudiantes de todos los niveles desde principiante hasta avanzado. Incluye páginas para fotocopiar e instrucciones paso a paso para actividades adicionales.
Resumo:
Libro orientado al auto-estudio para alumnos de nivel intermedio de inglés. Está estructurado en ciento cuarenta y cinco lecciones, cada una sobre un tema determinado de gramática inglesa, con su explicación y ejemplos en la página izquierda y ejercicios para practicar en la página derecha. Al final del libro hay una sección con las soluciones, siete apéndices sobre verbos regulares e irregulares, formas verbales para el presente y pasado, formas verbales para el futuro, verbos modales, contracciones, ortografía e inglés americano, un apartado con ejercicios adicionales que concentran varios temas de gramática en un mismo ejercicio, y una guía de estudio para ayudar a decidir qué temas repasar. Incluye un cd-rom con más ejercicios y mil setecientas preguntas de examen.
Resumo:
In this study we explore the impact of a morphological deficit on syntactic comprehension. A self-paced listening task was designed to investigate passive sentence processing in typically developing (TD) children and children with Grammatical-Specific Language Impairment (G-SLI). Participants had to judge whether the sentence they heard matched a picture they were shown. Working within the framework of the Computational Grammatical Complexity Hypothesis, which stresses how different components of the grammar interact, we tested whether children were able to use phonotactic cues to parse reversible passive sentences of the form the X was verbed by Y We predicted that TD children would be able to use phonotactics to parse a form like touched or hugged as a participle, and hence interpret passive sentences correctly. This cue is predicted not be used by G-SLI children, because they have difficulty building complex morphological representations. We demonstrate that indeed TD, but not G-SLI, children are able to use phonotactics cues in parsing passive sentences. (C) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
The artificial grammar (AG) learning literature (see, e.g., Mathews et al., 1989; Reber, 1967) has relied heavily on a single measure of implicitly acquired knowledge. Recent work comparing this measure (string classification) with a more indirect measure in which participants make liking ratings of novel stimuli (e.g., Manza & Bornstein, 1995; Newell & Bright, 2001) has shown that string classification (which we argue can be thought of as an explicit, rather than an implicit, measure of memory) gives rise to more explicit knowledge of the grammatical structure in learning strings and is more resilient to changes in surface features and processing between encoding and retrieval. We report data from two experiments that extend these findings. In Experiment 1, we showed that a divided attention manipulation (at retrieval) interfered with explicit retrieval of AG knowledge but did not interfere with implicit retrieval. In Experiment 2, we showed that forcing participants to respond within a very tight deadline resulted in the same asymmetric interference pattern between the tasks. In both experiments, we also showed that the type of information being retrieved influenced whether interference was observed. The results are discussed in terms of the relatively automatic nature of implicit retrieval and also with respect to the differences between analytic and nonanalytic processing (Whittlesea Price, 2001).
Resumo:
Through a close analysis of socio-biologist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy’s work on motherhood and ‘mirror neurons’ it is argued that Hrdy’s claims exemplify how research that ostensibly bases itself on neuroscience, including in literary studies ‘literary Darwinism’, relies after all not on scientific, but on political assumptions, namely on underlying, unquestioned claims about the autonomous, transparent, liberal agent of consumer capitalism. These underpinning assumptions, it is further argued, involve the suppression or overlooking of an alternative, prior tradition of feminist theory, including feminist science criticism.
Resumo:
The communicative approach to language learning is widely taught in Western education, and yet its predecessor, the grammar-translation method, is still commonly employed in other parts of the world. In Sweden, the increasing popularity of the communicative approach is often justified by the high level of students’ communicative skills (Öhman, 2013). At the same time, students’ written texts and speech contain many grammatical errors (Öhman, 2013). Consequently, being aware of their tendency to produce grammatical errors, some students express beliefs regarding both the explicit and implicit learning of grammar (Sawir, 2005; Boroujeni, 2012). The objective of this thesis is to gain more knowledge regarding students’ beliefs concerning the learning of English grammar at the upper secondary level, in Sweden. With this purpose a survey was conducted in two schools in Sweden, where 49 upper-secondary English students participated. Qualitative and quantitative methods were applied to process the collected data. Despite some difference in the participants’ ages, there were many similarities in their attitudes towards the teaching and learning of grammar. The results show that the participants in both schools believe that only by applying both, explicit and implicit methods, can they obtain a high level of language proficiency. The results of this study can help teachers in planning different activities that enhance the students’ knowledge of grammar.
Resumo:
Background: In normal aging, the decrease in the syntactic complexity of written production is usually associated with cognitive deficits. This study was aimed to analyze the quality of older adults' textual production indicated by verbal fluency (number of words) and grammatical complexity (number of ideas) in relation to gender, age, schooling, and cognitive status. Methods: From a probabilistic sample of community-dwelling people aged 65 years and above (n = 900), 577 were selected on basis of their responses to the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) sentence writing, which were submitted to content analysis; 323 were excluded as they left the item blank or performed illegible or not meaningful responses. Education adjusted cut-off scores for the MMSE were used to classify the participants as cognitively impaired or unimpaired. Total and subdomain MMSE scores were computed. Results: 40.56% of participants whose answers to the MMSE sentence were excluded from the analyses had cognitive impairment compared to 13.86% among those whose answers were included. The excluded participants were older and less educated. Women and those older than 80 years had the lowest scores in the MMSE. There was no statistically significant relationship between gender, age, schooling, and textual performance. There was a modest but significant correlation between number of words written and the scores in the Language subdomain. Conclusions: Results suggest the strong influence of schooling and age over MMSE sentence performance. Failing to write a sentence may suggest cognitive impairment, yet, instructions for the MMSE sentence, i.e. to produce a simple sentence, may limit its clinical interpretation.