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Language Development. What Is Language?How Language DevelopsBiological and Environmental Influences. Defining Language. Form of communication, whether spoken, written, or signed, based on system of symbolsInfinite generativity
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1. LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT
2. Language Development What Is Language?
How Language Develops
Biological and Environmental Influences
3. Defining Language Form of communication, whether spoken, written, or signed, based on system of symbols
Infinite generativity — ability to produce an endless number of meaningful sentences using a finite set of words and rules
4. Language’s Rule Systems
5. How Language Develops Infancy
Early Childhood
Middle and Late Childhood
Adolescence
Adulthood and Aging
6. Infancy Babbling, gestures, and other vocalizations
Crying - from birth
Cooing - 1 to 2 months
Babbling - around 6 months
Gestures - 8 to 12 months
7. Infancy Recognizing Language Sounds
‘Citizens of the world’
Newborns recognize sound changes
Can recognize own language sounds at 6 months
First Words
Receptive vocabulary considerably exceeds
spoken vocabulary
Timing of first word and vocabulary spurt varies
8. Infancy Two-Word Utterances
Begins between 18 to 24 months
Child relies heavily on gesture, tone, context
Telegraphic speech — use of short and
precise words without grammatical markers
9. Variation in Language Milestones
10. Early Childhood Understanding Phonology and Morphology
Children know morphological rules
Plural and possessive forms of nouns
Third-person singular and past-tense verbs
Children abstract rules and apply them to novel situations
Sometimes overgeneralize rules
11. Understanding Syntax Preschoolers learn and apply syntax rules
Children show growing mastery of complex rules for how words should be ordered
By elementary school years, children become skilled at using syntactical rules to construct lengthy and complex sentences
12. Family Environment Mother’s education level is positively correlated to number of books in home
Single-parent and welfare families had fewer books than two-parent and affluent families
Kindergartener had better language skills if parents read to them 3 or more times a week
13. Language Input and Young Children’s Vocabulary Development
14. Language Input and Young Children’s Vocabulary Development
15. Advances in Pragmatics
16. Advances in Semantics Speaking vocabulary: ranges from 8,000 to 14,000 words for 6-year-olds
Rate of 5 to 8 words per day from ages 1 to 6
Some estimate 6-year-old learns 22 words a day
Entering elementary school with small vocabulary places child at risk for reading problems
Quantity of parent talk linked to child’s vocabulary growth and SES of family
17. Middle and Late Childhood Vocabulary and grammar
Reading and writing assumes prominent role
Preschoolers usually respond with one word first
Elementary school children
Increasingly understand, use complex grammar
Metalinguistic awareness greatly improves
18. Reading Before learning to read, children learn
To use language to describe things not present
The alphabetic principle: letters represent sound
Whole language approach
Instruction should parallel child’s natural language
learning; reading should be whole and meaningful
Basic-skills-and-phonics approach
Instruction should teach phonics and its basic
rules; reading should involve simplified materials
19. Literacy 2- to 3-year-olds emerge from scribbling to begin printing letters
Most 4-year-olds can print their names
Reversed letters may not predict literacy problems
Children often invent spellings
Adults should encourage early writing
Literacy gets better with repeated practice
20. National Reading Panel Most effective phonological awareness training
Has two main skills: blending and segmentation
Best when integrated with reading and writing;
small groups more beneficial than whole class
Children benefit from guided oral reading
21. Relation of Reading Achievement to Number of Pages Read Daily
22. Grammatical Proficiency and Age of Arrival in U.S.
23. Middle and Late Childhood Bilingualism — ability to speak two languages
Learning second language easier for children
Children’s ability to pronounce second language
with correct accent decreases with age; sharp drop
after age 10 to 12
Has positive effect on children’s cognitive
development
24. Adolescence Increased use and understanding of
Sophisticated words
Analysis and abstract thinking
Metaphors — implied comparison of unlike things
Satire — use of irony, derision, or wit to expose
folly or wickedness
25. Adolescence Adolescents are much better at organizing ideas and writing
Dialect — variety of language distinguished by vocabulary, grammar, or pronunciation
Adolescent dialect with peers often uses jargon or slang
Usually used to indicate group membership
26. Adulthood Distinct personal linguistic style is part of special identity
Vocabulary often continues to increase throughout adult years until late adulthood
Little decline among healthier older adults
Non-language factors may be cause of decline in language skills in older adults
27. Adulthood Some decrements common in late adulthood
Inability to distinguish speech sounds
Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
Alzheimer’s disease
Language does not change
Word-finding difficulties are early warning signs
28. Biological Influences Evolution and the brain’s role in language
Human language about 100,000 years old
Particular regions of brain predisposed for
language acquisition
Most comprehend syntax in left hemisphere;
emotion and intonation comprehended in
right hemisphere
Aphasia — language disorder resulting from
brain damage; loss of ability to use words
29. Biological Influences Evolution and the brain’s role in language
Broca’s area — area of brain’s left frontal lobe involved in speech production
Wernicke’s area — area of brain’s left hemisphere involved in language comprehension
If damaged — fluent incomprehensible speech produced
30. Broca’s and Wernicke’s Areas of the Brain
31. Language Acquisition Device Chomsky
Humans biologically prewired for language
Language acquisition device (LAD):
biological endowment to detect features
and rules of language
Theoretical, not physical part of brain
Evidence of uniformity in language
milestones across languages and cultures
32. Environmental Influences Behavioral View
Language is complex learned skill, reinforced
Problems with behavioral view:
Cannot explain people creating novel sentences
Children can learn syntax of native language without reinforcement
Fails to explain language’s extensive orderliness
33. Environmental Influences Environmental influences
Mother’s language linked to child’s vocabulary
Child-directed speech — higher pitch for attention
Parents, older children modify their speech
Other strategies
Recasting — rephrasing
Expanding — restating
Labeling — identifying objects by names
35. An Interactionist View of Language Language
Has biological foundations
Acquisition influenced by experiences
Children acquire native language without explicit
teaching; some without encouragement
Bruner: parents and teachers help construct language acquisition support system (LASS)
Resembles Vygotsky’s ZPD
36. The End