Language in Thought and Action / S. I. Hayakawa.
Material type: TextPublication details: [Washington, D.C.] : Distributed by ERIC Clearinghouse, 1965. Description: 350 p. : 26 cmSubject(s): Communication (Thought Transfer) | English Instruction | Figurative Language | Language | Linguistics | Nonstandard Dialects | Semantics | Social Status | Speech | Writing (Composition)DDC classification: 422 Online resources: Click here to access online Summary: Jargon grows and communication is retarded when a learned vocabulary becomes more important for its social than its communicative functions. Teachers often severely correct the culturally deprived speaker of nonstandard English, whereas their first concern should be what is communicated, not how it is communicated. We are, after all, teaching communication, and must suppress our obsession with grammar before it destroys the open atmosphere which encourages the ability to learn any dialect, including the standard dialect. We should work to nurture in students a sensitivity to the "metamessages" in communications--the subtleties of tone and implication growing out of connotative meaning, figurative language, intonation, and emphasis. Thus, we impart to them a better control and awareness of their language, enabling them to write and speak in a manner which mirrors, in its cadences and other devices of sound, the "movement" of ideas, the shape of an argument, and the activity of the mind. (DL)Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | Bangladesh Public Administration Training Centre Library General Stacks | 422 HAL 1965 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | Nafisa | 22078 |
ERIC Note: Address delivered at the Florida Council of Teachers of English Conference, Fall 1966. ericd
Jargon grows and communication is retarded when a learned vocabulary becomes more important for its social than its communicative functions. Teachers often severely correct the culturally deprived speaker of nonstandard English, whereas their first concern should be what is communicated, not how it is communicated. We are, after all, teaching communication, and must suppress our obsession with grammar before it destroys the open atmosphere which encourages the ability to learn any dialect, including the standard dialect. We should work to nurture in students a sensitivity to the "metamessages" in communications--the subtleties of tone and implication growing out of connotative meaning, figurative language, intonation, and emphasis. Thus, we impart to them a better control and awareness of their language, enabling them to write and speak in a manner which mirrors, in its cadences and other devices of sound, the "movement" of ideas, the shape of an argument, and the activity of the mind. (DL)
The Florida English Journal, v3 n2 p1-12 Dec 1967. ericd
Microfiche. [Washington D.C.]: ERIC Clearinghouse microfiches : positive.
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