the expressed language needs

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diamondcutter

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Oct 21, 2014
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Variety of activity was also seen as a way of maintaining or increasing motivation. Several years ago we had one timetable that operated throughout, but we soon found both the students and the teachers lost interest about halfway through the ten weeks. This led us to a major re-think, so finally we brought it into line with the expressed language needs of the students.

Can I change ‘the expressed language needs’ into ‘the language-expressing needs’?
Thanks.
 
Thank you, Matthew.
 
I agree, Matthew. I take that to mean what the students expressed a desire to learn.
 
Having a variety of activities was also seen as a way of maintaining or increasing motivation. Several years ago, we had [STRIKE]one[/STRIKE] a timetable that [STRIKE]operated throughout[/STRIKE] we adopted widely, but we soon found both the students and the teachers lost interest about halfway through the ten weeks of the course. This led us to a major re-think, so finally we brought it into line with the expressed language needs of the students.

Can I change ‘the expressed language needs’ into ‘the language-expressing needs’?

No, they are different.
expressed language needs - needs that have been written down and formalised, to be met
language-expressing needs - ?

not a teacher
 
I don't think there is enough information here to state that the "expressed needs" were written down and formalized.
 
Ok, expressed is very general term which could mean anything said but not written. I was thinking along the line of legal use eg. expressed condition in a contract. In the context of this passage, it appears to be a matter that was important enough to warrant the management's attention.
 
Yes, it appears that both students and teachers were unhappy with the status quo.
 
From experience, I suspect that word 'expressed' is acting as an adjective meaning something synonymous with 'explicit' or 'specific'. If so, the correct form of the word in this phrase should be 'express', not 'expressed'.

Some collocations using 'express' in this way are: an express desire/wish/need
 
That could work, but there is nothing wrong with "expressed" used as an adjective.
 
That website seems to have a primarily legal focus.
 
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