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Carl 1986 |
| Reference | |
Carl, Richard. 1986. "Oral and written styles." READ: Promoting Literacy and Literature. Interest level: specialist. | |
| Summary | |
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Written style tends to be shorter than spoken style and to lack the redundancies and colloquialisms of speech. | |
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Ruddell's research (1965) shows that students had better comprehension of written passages when structural patterns of written passages were similar to the children's oral language patterns. | |
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Longacre developed a technique to help persons who do not speak the language as their mother tongue uncover a spoken style ("Discourse analysis and literacy," unpublished, 1975). | |
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Carl describes the procedure and lists major structural features to consider, including | |
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Literacy workers will also want to encourage the development of locally-authored materials. Carl believes the written style should be allowed to develop without instructions from outsiders, but lists things that can be done to aid the process. | |
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Page content last modified: 18 May 1999 |
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© 1999 SIL International |