Difference between revisions of "Davy & MacWhinney - Spanish Sentence Production"

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==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
Construction of the documentation on this study is now in progress.
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The goal of this study is to determine whether and how oral repetition can improve the fluent production of Spanish sentences of various lengths and constructions. We do this by presenting students with spoken Spanish sentences and letting them practice repeating them back. In the pilot study, students heard each sentence three times and immediately repeated it back. We measured the length of the repetition (how long it took them to repeat it back) and recorded the number and types of errors they made.  We found that the practice helped students fluently repeat the sentences they heard, in terms of number of errors made and in the time needed to repeat the sentence. 
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Current studies train students to practice speaking sentences by describing series of pictures.  During training, students see pictures and hear the sentence described by those pictures and are asked to repeat the sentence back.  After the initial training phase, students should be able to respond to the pictures without hearing the spoken sentence.  Future work will also look at different factors that may make a difference in training, including whether it is better to train on full sentences or on individual phrases.
  
 
==Background and Significance==
 
==Background and Significance==

Revision as of 03:19, 2 February 2010

Spanish Sentence Production

Summary Table

Abstract

The goal of this study is to determine whether and how oral repetition can improve the fluent production of Spanish sentences of various lengths and constructions. We do this by presenting students with spoken Spanish sentences and letting them practice repeating them back. In the pilot study, students heard each sentence three times and immediately repeated it back. We measured the length of the repetition (how long it took them to repeat it back) and recorded the number and types of errors they made. We found that the practice helped students fluently repeat the sentences they heard, in terms of number of errors made and in the time needed to repeat the sentence.

Current studies train students to practice speaking sentences by describing series of pictures. During training, students see pictures and hear the sentence described by those pictures and are asked to repeat the sentence back. After the initial training phase, students should be able to respond to the pictures without hearing the spoken sentence. Future work will also look at different factors that may make a difference in training, including whether it is better to train on full sentences or on individual phrases.

Background and Significance

Glossary

Research Questions

Study One

Hypothesis

Independent Variables

Dependent Variables

Results

Explanation

Connections to Other Studies

References

Future Plans