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1
The growth of tense productivity
In: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 52 (2009) 4, 930-944
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2
Stalls and revisions: a developmental perspective on sentence production
In: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 51 (2008) 4, 953-966
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3
Individual differences in the onset of tense marking: a growth-curve analysis
In: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 49 (2006) 5, 984-1000
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4
Language - Articles and Reports - Individual Differences in the Onset of Tense Marking: A Growth-Curve Analysis
In: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 49 (2006) 5, 984
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5
The international adult literacy survey (IALS). Part 2
Vogel, Susan A. (Hrsg.); Holt, Janet K. (Mitarb.); Magajna, Lidija (Mitarb.)...
In: Dyslexia. - Bracknell : British Dyslexia Association 9 (2003) 4, 193-265
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6
A comparative study of adults with and without self-reported learning disabilities in six English-speaking populations: What have we learned?
In: Dyslexia. - Bracknell : British Dyslexia Association 9 (2003) 4, 193-228
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7
Testing a model of achievement motivation
E, Nianwu. - : Northern Illinois University, 1998
Abstract: Includes bibliographical references (pages [39]-41) ; A model of achievement motivation was tested in this study. The purpose was to examine the effect of parent involvement and social economic status on student selfperception, motivation, and math achievement. The hypothesis of this study was that parent involvement and SES has an indirect influence on student achievement, mediated by student motivation variables. The Prospects data set was selected because it was a very large data set and representative of the primary-school student population. The third-grade cohort, which included 5,368 students, was used as the sample of the study. Structural equation modeling was used as the statistical analysis method to examine both the direct and indirect relationships between variables. In particular, LISREL VIII, a SEM statistical package, was selected to conduct the statistical analysis to test if the basic structure of the motivation model fit the Prospects data set and to test modified models with inclusion of parent involvement and SES. The results of the study supported primary elements of several major motivation theories. Results showed that past achievement influences student self-perception and achievement directly and that self-perceptions predict academic engagement, which in turn is a predictor of achievement, as is indicated by the four motivation theories. Further, two additional models were derived from the full model after model modification. In one of the resulting models both parent involvement and SES influenced student self-perceptions directly and influenced student achievement indirectly through self-perceptions and academic engagement. The results of the other model indicated that parent involvement was a predictor of academic engagement and indirectly affected student achievement. ; M.S. Ed. (Master of Education)
Keyword: Achievement motivation--Testing
URL: http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/14702
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