972 resultados para Alexandrian grammar


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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.

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Continúa en el n. 18, p. 19-24 y en el n. 19, p. 92-99

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Se trata la organización de los planes de enseñanza y programas de estudios en las Secondary Grammar Schools inglesas, cuyo factor más destacado es la división del alumnado en grupos de aptitud según sus dotes personales. Se comparan los planes de estudio de las Secondary School pública con las Public Schools privadas. Se concluye que la enseñanza en las escuelas secundarias inglesas carecen de uniformidad, cada centro se forma su propio programa de estudios individual y libérrimo, utilizándose todos los cauces educativos viables y todas las posibilidades docentes en todas las Grammar Schools, que exige fuertes necesidades presupuestarias, y gran número de profesorado especializado. s continuación del artículo con el mismo título del n. 17, p. 194-169 y continúa en el n. 19, p. 92-99.

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Es continuación de los artículos, con el mismo título, del n. 17, p. 164-169 y del n. 18, p. 19-24

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In this study we make a general research question [1] and two specific ones [2] i [3]: [1] How can we establish a new model for teaching and learning grammar? [2] How metalinguistic knowledge is built within this model? [3] How can we elaborate an analysis model for exploring grammar knowledge?

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Two experiments examined the claim for distinct implicit and explicit learning modes in the artificial grammar-learning task (Reber, 1967, 1989). Subjects initially attempted to memorize strings of letters generated by a finite-state grammar and then classified new grammatical and nongrammatical strings. Experiment 1 showed that subjects' assessment of isolated parts of strings was sufficient to account for their classification performance but that the rules elicited in free report were not sufficient. Experiment 2 showed that performing a concurrent random number generation task under different priorities interfered with free report and classification performance equally. Furthermore, giving different groups of subjects incidental or intentional learning instructions did not affect classification or free report.

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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).

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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.