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Language A system of rules for using symbols to share meaning
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modes ReceptiveExpressive
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methods Oral Written Visual
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ReceptiveExpressive OralListenSpeak
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ReceptiveExpressive OralListenSpeak WrittenReadWrite
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ReceptiveExpressive OralListenSpeak WrittenReadWrite VisualAppreciateCreate
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ReceptiveExpressive Oral ListenSpeak Written ReadWrite VisualAppreciateCreate Read aloud
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Language Rule Systems Phonology (sounds) Semantics (meaning) Syntax (structure) Pragmatics (function)
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Language Rule Systems Gunning (2008, p. 4) adds two more: Morphology – word formation (a part of syntax) Prosody – intonation and rhythm of speech (a part of pragmatics)
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Phonology ~ 77 Phonemes ~ 45 in English Int’l. Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) Articulatory Phonetics Voice anatomy
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Semantics Meaningful cries: hunger, anger, pain Vocabulary Fast mapping 12 months = 1 word, 18=20, 24=270 Hart and Risley Professional / Middle / Poor families 11 / 6 / 3 million words by age 3 Over- and underextension
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Syntax Grammatical structure S-V-O, S-O-V Morphemes Overregularization Nouns, verbs, adjectives, articles Conjunctions, embedded sentences, tag questions, ido-do, passive
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Pragmatics Communicative competence Knowing when to speak, when not to, what to talk about and with whom, when, where, and in what manner to interact Burst feeding
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Pragmatics, continued Infants must Focus attention Recognize gaze and gesture Associate sounds and voices with certain events and people Develop reciprocity Use language to communicate
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Pragmatics, continued Cultural context Dialect, hierarchy, space Language functions Halliday, Tough Baron: Affection, Control, Information, Pedagogy, Social exchange Discourse - Tele-talk, greetings, lecture, caregiver speech
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Language Acquisition Theories Virtually every child, without special training, exposed to surface structures of language in many interaction contexts, builds for himself – in a short period of time and at an early stage in his cognitive development – a deep-level, abstract, and highly complex system of linguistic structure and use. (Lindfors 1987)
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Nurture = Behaviorism Attention Repetition Approval (reinforcement)
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Nature = Nativist Language Acquisition Device Chomsky: Colorless green ideas sleep furiously Pinker: Language Instinct (1995)
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Biological Influences Brain’s role Hemispheric specialization Broca’s area – structure Wernicke’s area – comprehension
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Biological prewiring Chomsky’s view: Language Acquisition Device Critical Period for Language Case of Genie Critical period not certain
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Social interaction Responsive interaction Siegel: “human connections shape the neural connections from which the mind emerges” Bruner’s Language Acquisition Support System (LASS) Caregiver speech
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Social interaction Piaget: Thought and Language Egocentric Addressed to no one Vygotsky: Language and Thought Private speech Inner speech Communication with the self
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Social interaction Whole Language approach Emergent Literacy
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Language Development Milestones COOING 4 weeks – precursors to vowels 8 weeks – real vowels 12 weeks – discovers own voice BABBLING 6 months – Echolalia m, p, b, k, g with vowels 8 months – Vocables
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Milestones FIRST WORDS 12 months – Holophrases Overgeneralized speech
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Milestones TELEGRAPHIC SPEECH Identificaton – “See doggie” Location – “Book there” Repetition – “More milk” Nonexistence – “Allgone thing” Negation – “Not wolf” Possession – “My candy” Attribution – “Big car” Agent-action – “ Mama walk” Action-direct object – “Hit you” Action-indirect object – “Give Papa” Action-instrument – “Cut knife” Question – “Where ball?
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Bilingualism Simultaneous Successive
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Bilingualism True Bilingual education Teach immigrant children in native language Add English gradually Bilingualism does not interfere with language development.
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Bilingualism English as a Second Language Content curriculum in English Assistance in ESL Intervention
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Teaching ReceptiveExpressive Oral ListenSpeak Written ReadWrite VisualAppreciateCreate Read aloud
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Learning about speech Prenatal auditory experiences influence neonatal auditory preferences (DeCasper & Spence 1986) Caregiver speech Extensions, expansions, recasts Dramatic play Metalinguistic awareness
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Learning about Print Environmental Print Book Print
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Learning about writing Letter like forms Constancy of position in space Reversals Dyslexia Spacing Spelling: public and private (invented)
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Learning about reading Five Big Ideas in Early Literacy Phonemic awareness Phonics Vocabulary Comprehension Fluency (National Reading Panel, 1999)
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Learning about reading Alphabetic principle Sight words Part-to-whole instruction Whole-to-part instruction Genres Baby board books Predictable books Fairy tales and Mother Goose Poems and Songs
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Reading aloud is the single most important activity for building the understandings and skills that are essential for later reading success NAEYC (1998) Learning to Read & Write.
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Language Development Infancy Vocalization: Begins with babbling Early communications are pragmatic One-word (holophrase) stage: 10 to 13 months Two word (telegraphic) stage: 18 to 24 months Roger Brown: Mean Length of Utterance (MLU) Five stages of MLU index language maturity
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Early childhood: Advances in Phonology Morphology Syntax Semantics Pragmatics Sequences of development Words/vocabulary emerge (12 months) Transition to combining words/phrases into sentences (24 months) Transition to complex sentences (age 2 to 3 through elementary years) Language Development
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Middle and Late Childhood: Reading Chall’s model describes the development of reading in five stages with the first ranging from birth to first grade and the final stage in the high school years.
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Debate There is debate about the whole language approach vs. the basic skills-&-phonics approach.
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Whole language approach stresses that the learning to read should parallel the child’s natural learning of language. The premise is that reading should be integrated with other skills.
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Basic skills-&-phonics approach emphasizes teaching phonetics and its rules for translating written symbols into sounds.
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A combination of the two approaches is probably best.
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