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Language Development and Linguistic Diversity. Kathryn Oswood, Linda Jodock, Star Miller. Personal Outcome. To understand how children learn language To investigate the positive and negative impacts of second-language learning To better serve students with language disorders.
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Language Development and Linguistic Diversity Kathryn Oswood, Linda Jodock, Star Miller
Personal Outcome • To understand how children learn language • To investigate the positive and negative impacts of second-language learning • To better serve students with language disorders
Biological Foundations • Language is predominantly associated with the left hemisphere of the brain. • Wernicke’s Area • Affects comprehension in speech that is heard and text that is read. • Broca’s Area • Affects the production of language through speaking or writing. • Individual differences in language ability are due to genetics. • Critical Periods for Language Development • Lenneberg proposed that language must be acquired before adolescence. • Speed of Acquisition Relative to the Amount of Input for Language Development • Children acquire language with little intervention
Language Acquisition • Comprehension and production of language involves a variety of skills. • Speech Perception • Speech Production and Phonological Development • Lexical Development • Semantic Development • Grammatical and Syntactical Development • Pragmatic Development • Metalinguistic Development
Prelinguistic Development • Speech Perception • Phonemes • See Table 7.1 for vowel and consonant phonemes in English • Speech Production • Babbling
Semantic Development • Referential Style • One-word utterances that refer to objects • Expressive Style • One-word expressions of emotion, feeling, and action • Vocabulary Growth • Fast Mapping • A child understands a word in one exposure • Extended Mapping • A child understands a word after multiple exposures
Syntactic Development • Morphemes • Small units of language that convey meaning. • Unbound morphemes • Words that can stand alone • Dog, fire, tractor • Bound morphemes • Cannot stand alone • Prefixes, suffixes • MLU • Mean Length of Utterance • The length of a child’s utterances calculated in morphemes. • See Figure 7.2, page 196
Syntactic Development • Stage 1 • Telegraphic Speech • “Doggie run” • Stage 2 • Overregularization • “”goed” instead of “went” • Stage 3 • Use of negatives • “I not eating” • Stage 4 and 5 • Compound and complex sentences and passive constructions • “The teddy and the doll are going to play.” • “You bettern’t do that.”
Pragmatic Development • The ability to understand the perspective of others contributes to the ability to communicate with others in dialogue.
Metalinguistic Awareness • Metasyntax • Discrimination of syntactically correct sentences from incorrect ones • Metalexical / Metasemantic • Understanding the nature of a word • Metaphonological • Awareness that words are composed of separable sounds • Alphabetic Principle • Understanding that letters represent sounds
Cognitive Differences in Deaf and Hearing-Normal Individuals
Connection to Learning Theory:Stages versus Continuous Development
Connection to Learning Theory:Lasting versus Transient • Lack of exposure to language of any kind, oral or sign, will negatively impact language development. Early exposure is essential.
References • http://www.rhsmpsychology.com/images/language_brain.jpg