Language, health and aging: notes I Course Description: Should we use or avoid a simplified speech register (Elderspeak) when speaking to older people?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 12 Gender Roles and Sexuality
Advertisements

Hartono, S.S., M.Pd. COLASULA
Second Language Acquisition
LearningGames and Early Childhood Curriculum Connecting Center-Based and Home Learning Using a Comprehensive Curriculum Hilary Parrish Product Development.
Life-Span Development Thirteenth Edition
CHAPTER 4: Language Development of Infants and Toddlers
Maine Department of Education Maine Reading First Course Session #3 Oral Language Development.
Language Special form of communication in which we learn complex rules to manipulate symbols that can be used to generate an endless number of meaningful.
Dan’s Flirtations with Discourse (and Narrative) ---in his approach to language acquisition “Flirting with Discourse” Language Acquisition Task + Turn.
Chapter 4: Social Interaction Melanie Hatfield Soc 100.
Chapter 5 Communications in Intimate Relationships.
Prepared by Darrell G. Mullins Salisbury University Copyright © 2010, 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. This multimedia product and its contents are protected.
Psycholinguistics 09 Conversational Interaction. Conversation is a complex process of language use and a special form of social interaction with its own.
Motivation Foreign and Second Language Learning
CSD 5400 REHABILITATION PROCEDURES FOR THE HARD OF HEARING Language and Speech of Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Characteristics and Concerns Language Acquisition.
Key Understandings for Learning and Teaching in the Early Years
Learning Objectives State the importance of communication with older adults. Identify effective and ineffective communication strategies. Understand how.
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT 1 PSYCHOLOGY 3050: Social Construction of Mind
Communicative Language Teaching (CLT)
The Life-Span Perspective. Since 1900, the older adult population has increased dramatically –Greatest increases up to 2040 will be in the 85-and-over.
The Einstein Geriatrics Fellowship Core Curriculum.
Agenda, 15 January 2008 Overview of Course Harwood: Chapter 1 NiceNet Conversational Analysis Tutorial Highlights of language production, I.
Sarah E. DeAnna The Ohio State University. Most elders are not socially isolated and rely on the support of informal network members in order to successfully.
PSYCHOLOGY AND NOTABLE DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGISTS Child Development.
Chapter Six: Developing and Maintaining Relationships  What is Interpersonal Communication?  At least two people who are interdependent.  Allows for.
Lev Semenovich Vygotsky Vygotsky A person’s interpersonal, or internal processes, have their roots in interactions with others. Emphasized.
Copyright © 2002 Thomson Learning, Inc. Chapter 5: Language: Barrier and Bridge PowerPoint Presentation to accompany Looking Out, Looking In, Tenth Edition.
ELA Common Core Shifts. Shift 1 Balancing Informational & Literary Text.
CHAPTER 3: Language Development Among Children of Linguistic Diversity Modified by Dr. Laura Taddei Language Development in Early Childhood Education Fourth.
Chapter 9: Cognitive Development in Preschool Children 9.1 Cognitive Processes 9.2 Language 9.3 Communicating with Others 9.4 Early Childhood Education.
Overview of Discourse Analysis 1. Pragmatics and Politeness Theory ( ) 2. Ethnography of Speaking ( ) 3. Interactional Sociolinguistics ( )
Language CHAPTER TOPICS Language Is Symbolic
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 1  Two Major Types  Language disorders include formulating and comprehending spoken messages. ▪ Categories:
Unit 2 – Health & Human Development Area of study 2 – Chapter 10 – Understanding adulthood.
KEEPING SYLVIA’S IDENTITY Dementia & GDCP Working hand in hand with Community Health/LGA Forum 18 th June 2014.
Can We Talk?: Building Social Communication Skills Lydia H. Soifer, Ph.D. SPED*NET Wilton Norwalk SPED Partners.
Opportunity Age: Fulfillment in the Third Age of Life Wednesday, March 25, Noon (EDT) Many people define aging negatively, as a time of life filled.
Chapter 1 Delays, Disorders, and Differences. What are they? Language Delay – Language Disorder –
Chapter 4 Social Interaction. Chapter Outline What is Social Interaction? The Sociology of Emotions Modes of Social Interaction Micro, Meso, Macro and.
Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 12 Chapter 12 Gender Roles and Sexuality.
Introduction defining communication. communication let’s draw our map.
Parents, Families, and Exceptionality
Anchor Standards ELA Standards marked with this symbol represent Kansas’s 15%
This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: any public performance or display, including.
The Journey Of Adulthood, 5/e Helen L. Bee & Barbara R. Bjorklund Chapter 6 Social Roles The Journey of Adulthood 5/e by Bee & Bjorklund. Copyright © 2004.
COACHING. Coaching focuses on partnering with families. This is a shift from the expert telling parents what to do in a top down fashion to a coach who.
First two or three years of development Physical capability of learning language Language learning environment – caregiver speech Chapter 14 - First language.
First Language Acquisition
Delmar Learning Copyright © 2003 Delmar Learning, a Thomson Learning company Chapter 23 Care of Young, Middle and Older Adults.
Career Counseling: A Holistic Approach CHAPTER 14: CAREER DEVELOPMENT AND TRANSITIONS OF WORKING ADULTS ©2016. CENGAGE LEARNING. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Goal :Communicative Competence
CSD 2230 HUMAN COMMUNICATION DISORDERS Topic 2 Normal Communication Development and Communication Across the Lifespan Older Kids and Adults.
Unit 117 – Introduction to Learning Disability. Learning Objectives By the end of the session you will: 1.Know the importance of a person centred approach.
CHAPTER 16 SOCIOEMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE ADULTHOOD.
Chapter 1 Children with Exceptionalities and Their Families © 2015 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Chapter 8 Children with Communication, Language, and Speech Disorders © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Second Language Acquisition and Theory Julie Lucas
Language: Comprehension, Production, & Bilingualism Dr. Claudia J. Stanny EXP 4507 Memory & Cognition Spring 2009.
1 Chapter 2 English in the Repertoire By Barbara Mayor Presentation: Dr. Faisal AL-Qahtani.
Theoretical Perspectives on Aging Chapter 2 Part 2 HPR 452.
PSYC 206 Lifespan Development Bilge Yagmurlu.
Copyright © 2013, 2004 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc.
CALMS Approach to Stammering
A Topical Approach to Life-Span Development 6e
Approaches to Discourse Analysis
Pragmatic Domains Communicative functions Discourse management
The Ethnography of Communication ( EC )
Chapter 8 Communicative competence
Copyright © 2013, 2004 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc.
Sociolinguistics.
Presentation transcript:

Language, health and aging: notes I Course Description: Should we use or avoid a simplified speech register (Elderspeak) when speaking to older people? What are the changes in our language as we age? This class gives an overview of the literature on language and aging, including impaired language, with a focus on enhancing communication as part of caregiving. The first half of the course will be face-to-face; the second half will be online, when you will partner (via CENTRA) with students in Taiwan who are taking a similar course. Cross-listed with Gerontology, this course also fulfills cross-cultural competencies. Spring, 2006

The importance of communication L.Worrall & L. Hickson Communication disability in aging. Delmar, p. 12

How older adults use language L.Worrall & L. Hickson Communication disability in aging. Delmar, p. 140

Speech/language: early development By 3-4 years Integration of content, form, use By 5-6 years Knows the language By 9 years Complex messages Normal aging Few changes in speech & language

Pre-school: language in use Birth to 2: Parents’ reactions to non- intentional communication lead to Intentional communication Joint attention At 3: independent communication beginning of narration, with descriptions By 4 and 5, speaker adds setting, & rehearsal of action See works by Katharine Nelson and by Robin Fivush

Starting school Can sustain longer conversations Knows how to handle shifting topics shifting styles Uses different genres (adds literacy) Begins to use language of persuasion and negotiation Nelson, Fivush, and a run through PsychInfo

The adult speaker Integrated content, form and use Discourse incorporates Persuasion Argument Narration Pragmatics crucial for social interaction Try this quiz

Pragmatics: how to do things with words Rules for situational use of language What to say when Greetings and similar routines Turn-taking Interruptions and overlaps How to say something And when not to say it Start here:

Communication and Aging: Chapter 1 The life span perspective process - do adults think differently? (This is what came to the centre of Knowles’ theory of andragogy : In pedagogy, the concern is with transmitting the content, while in andragogy, the concern is with facilitating the acquisition of the content.) situations - do adults find themselves in different circumstances to other age groups? experiences - does the accumulation of experience change things? What difference does having been through a greater range of things make? Nussbaum et al, Ch 1

Stages in adulthood Middle adulthood : age forty to sixty-five Midlife transition-forty to forty-five Entering middle adulthood-forty-five to fifty Age fifty transition-fifty to fifty-five Culmination of middle adulthood-fifty-five to sixty Late adulthood : age sixty on Late adult transition-sixty to sixty-five L.Worrall & L. Hickson Communication disability in aging

language strategies Support maintenance of identity and place in the larger world Power shifts in relationships with family Power shifts in relationships with friends And a good bit more…

Later – we will look at meanings Part of language across the lifespan is our learning when and how to privilege specific meanings. …privileged meanings shape the way we understand language…such prominent meanings affect our linguistic and psycholinguistic behavior in areas such as *jokes*irony *metaphors and idioms*innovation What is “the effect of accessible meanings on speech production and comprehension”? Giora (2003) looks at “how, in addition to contextual information, salient meanings and sense of words and fixed expressions shape our linguistic behavior” (3) R. Giora (2003) On our mind: Salience, context, and figurative Language. Oxford UP

Learning about theory It is a great relief, though, that the quest for truth must always fail, so that any new theory is bound to be improved, reversed, or replaced by new thinking. (Giora, On Our Mind, viii) R. Giora (2003) On our mind: Salience, context, and figurative Language. Oxford UP

Theories of successful aging stress social interaction disengagement theory—mutual, insuitable (system’s needs are filled), universal (system disengages in order to provide stability) activity theory—research findings about activities and social relationships that contradict disengagement continuity theory—explains why some disengage, others don’t, and both can be happy Nussbaum et al, Ch 1

Theories, continued socioemotional selectivity theory: keyed to social exchange which is basically keyed to the notion of tradeoffs in terms of social relationships optimize rewards from close personal relationships minimize costly interactions with unknowns selective optimization—propositions by which people select, optimize and compensate for the losses (such as reserves, physical strenfgth) social-environmental theory—interaction of person with environment and socio-cultural norms that define roles and attitudes, which impact relations Nussbaum et al, Ch 1