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FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION

FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION. BY: Marisol Barraza. HOW DO CHILDREN COMMUNICATE? SMALL BABIES END OF FIRST YEAR 18 MONTHS 3 YEARS SCHOOL AGE. First Language Acquisition. Children have a remarkable ability to communicate.

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FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION

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  1. FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION BY: Marisol Barraza

  2. HOW DO CHILDREN COMMUNICATE? • SMALL BABIES • END OF FIRST YEAR • 18 MONTHS • 3 YEARS • SCHOOL AGE

  3. FirstLanguageAcquisition • Children have a remarkable ability to communicate. • Small babies: children babble and coo and cry and vocally and non-vocally send messages and receive messages. • End of first year: children start to imitate words and speech sounds and about this time use first words.

  4. 3. 18 months: their vocabulary in terms of words has increased and are beginning to use 2 word 3 word utterances (telegraphic utterances) 4. 3 years: Children can comprehend an incredible quantity of linguistic input, they chatter nonstop. 5. School age: Children start to internalize increasingly complex structures, expand their vocabulary and sharpen their communication skills and they also learn the social functions of their language.

  5. FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION WHAT ARE THE THREE POSITIONS IN FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION?

  6. Theories of First Language Acquisition • Theories of language acquisition attempt to answer some questions about how people can have the amazing language acquisition ability.

  7. FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION • Behavioristic Position • Nativist Position • Functional Position

  8. Behavioristic Position • Individuals are born without built-in mental content and their knowledge comes from experience and perception(tabula rasa). • Assumes a learner is essentially passive, responding to environmental stimuli. • Behavior is shaped through positive reinforcement or negative reinforcement. • Consider effective language behavior to be the production of correct responses to stimuli. If a particular response is reinforced, it then becomes habitual, or conditioned.

  9. Behavioristic Position Behaviorist Learning Theory is a process of forming habits; the teacher controls the learning environment and learners are empty vessels into which the teacher pours knowledge.

  10. Nativist • We have an innate predisposition to learn language, and learning is in our genetics. • According to Chomsky, this innate knowledge is embodied in a ¨little black box¨ of sorts, a language acquisition device (LAD). • All human beings are genetically equipped with the ability that enables them to acquire language. (a system of universal linguistic rules or Universal Grammar)

  11. Nativist Cognitive Learning Theory emphasized the learner´s cognitive ability, involving reasoning and mental processes rather than habit formation.

  12. Nativist • The child´s language at any stage is systematic in that the child is constantly forming hypotheses con the basis of the input received and then testing those hypothesis in speech and comprehension. • The early grammars of child language were referred to as pivot grammar. • The parallel Distributed Processing: a child´s linguistic performance may be the consequence of many levels of simultaneous neural interconnections rather that a serial process of one rule being applied, then another, then another and so forth.

  13. Functional Approaches Two emphases emerged • Researchers began to realize that language was a cognitive and affective ability to communicate with all the things including the self. • They dealt with the forms of language, not the deeper functional levels.

  14. Functional Approaches Cognition and Language Development • Bloom found three possible underlying relationships: agent-action, agent-object, and possessor-possessed. • In addition, he concluded that children learn underlying structures, not superficial word order. • Piaget insisted that what children learn about language is determined by what they already know about the world. • Dan Slobin demonstrated that semantic learning depends on cognitive development.

  15. Functional Approaches Social Interaction and Language Development • Social constructivist emphasized on the function of language in discourse. • Discourse has a special meaning in that language is used for interactive communication.

  16. Functional Approaches The functional context approach to learning • stresses the importance of making learning relevant to the experience of learners and their work context. • The learning of new information is facilitated by making it possible for the learner to relate it to knowledge already possessed and transform old knowledge into new knowledge. • By using materials that the learner will use after training, transfer of learning from the classroom to the "real world" will be enhanced.

  17. What issues in First Language Acquisition were covered in this chapter?

  18. Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition Competence and Performance Competence: • Referstoone´sunderlyingknowledge of a system, event, or fact. • Itisthenonobservableabilityto do something, toperformsomething. • Competence & Language: itisone´sknowldege of thesystem of a language (rules of grammar, vocabulary)-allthepieces of language and howtheyfittogether.

  19. Competence and Performance Performance • It is the overtly observable and concrete manifestation or realization of competence. • It is the actual production (speaking, writing) or the comprehension (listening, reading) of linguistic events.

  20. Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition Comprehension and Production • They are both aspects of competence and performance. • Children seem to understand more than they actually produce like adults do. 

  21. Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition Is language acquisition nature or nurture? • Even if Nativists insist that a child is born with an innate knowledge toward language, there are a number of problems. • The innateness is important, but we should not ignore the environmental factors. Language is both acquired and learned

  22. Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition UNIVERSALS • Children go through similar Universal Language Acquisition stages regardless of cultural and social circumstances. • Language is universally acquired in the same manner, and the deep structure of language at its deepest level may be common to all languages. • According to Maratsos (1988), universal linguistic categories such as word order, morphological marking tone, agreement, reduced reference of nouns and noun clauses, verbs and verb classes, predication, negation and question formation are common to all languages. • There are principles and parameters which specify some limited possibilities of variation. • Parameters determines ways in which languages can vary.

  23. Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition Systematicity and Variability • Systematicity means that children show a remarkable ability to infer the phonological, structural, lexical and semantic system of language. • However, in the midst of all this systematicity, there is an equal amount of variability in the process of learning. • This means that something children once learned may easily be changed or forgotten due to the perception of new language systems.

  24. Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition Language and Thought • Piaget claimed that cognitive development affects language. • On the other hand, others claimed that language has an effect on thought. • The truth is that language and thought are closely related.

  25. Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition Imitation • One of the most important strategies a child uses in language learning is imitation. • Behaviorists assume one type of imitation, but a deeper level of imitation is much more important in the process of language acquisition. • When children imitate the surface structure of the language, they are not able to understand what they are imitating.

  26. Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition Practice • A behavioristic model of first language acquisition would claim that practice - repetition and association – is the key to the formation of habits by operant conditioning. • Practice is usually regarded as referring to speaking only. But we can also think about comprehension practice. • The child learns not only how to initiate a conversation but how to respond to another’s initiating utterance and recognize the function of the discourse.

  27. Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition Input • The role of input in the child’s acquisition of language is very important. • Children can speak what they hear. • Adult and peer input to the child is far more crucial that nativists earlier thought. • Adult input shapes the child’s acquisition and the interaction patterns between child and parent change according to the increasing language skill of the child.

  28. Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition Discourse • Berko-Gleason mentioned that interaction, rather than exposure, is required in order for successful first language acquisition to take place and children learn language in the context of being spoken to. • Sinclair and Coulthard proposed that conversations should be examined in terms of initiations and responses.

  29. In Conclusion • In order to understand why it’s not easy to learn a second language in spite of the first language acquisition, we should understand the nature of initial acquisition process.

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