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Published byHelena Bishop Modified over 9 years ago
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Language Acqisition - From Womb to School
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Content Pre/Postnatal Language Development The First Three Years The Pre-School Years The School Years
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Pre/Postnatal Development
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language acquisition already starts in the womb unborn babies have a relatively well-developed auditory system they are able to perceive and recognize their mother's voice
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by the end of one month, babies are already able to perceive phonetic differences their own production is limited to crying first oral communication
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babies are physically not able to articulate “proper” sounds they start cooing (besides crying) - earliest unit of signaling in the vocal mode babies interact with their environment actively
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milestone in language acquisition: babbling – occurs between 6-8 months of age – reduplicative babbling – dadada – variagated babbling – kadabu
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first words critical mass telegraphic sentences - function words and grammatical morphemes
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The First Three Years
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Characteristics of the stages of language learning: – predictable patterns in the emergence and development of many features of the language that is being learned (depending on the cognitive development) – reflection of the gradual mastery of linguistic elements
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Linguistic elements 1.Grammatical morphemes 2.Negation 3.Questions
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Grammatical morphemes 1.Present progressive –ing (Mommy running) 2.Plural –s (Two books) 3.Irregular past forms (Baby went) 4.Possessive ‘s (Daddy‘s hat) 5.Copula (Annie is happy)
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6. Articles the and a 7. Regular past –ed (She walked) 8. Third person singular simple present –s (She runs) 9. Auxiliary be (He is coming)
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Why are these grammatical morphemes acquired in the observed order? – frequency of occurrence in parents´ speech – cognitive complexity of the meanings – difficulty of perceiving/ pronouncing the morphemes
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The ´Wug Test´: ´Here is a wug. Now there are two of them. There are two _____________.´ ´Here is a man who knows how to bud. Yesterday he did the same thing. Yesterday he _____________.´
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Demonstration that children know the rules for the formation of plural and simple past in English. systematic development
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Negation: Stage 1: No. No cookie. No comb hair. Stage 2: Daddy no comb hair. Don’t touch that! Stage 3: I can’t do it. He don’t want it. Stage 4: You didn’t have any supper. She doesn’t want it. I don’t have no more candles.
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Questions: – predictable order of emergence of ´wh´-questions 1.what 2.where and who 3.why 4.how and when
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Acquisition of word order in questions: Stage 1: Cookie? Mummy book? Where‘s Daddy? What‘s that? Stage 2: You like this? I have some? Stage 3: Can I go? Are you happy? Is the teddy is tired? Do I can have a cookie? Stage 4: Are you going to play with me? Do dogs like ice-cream?
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Stage 5: Are these your boots? Why did you do that? Does Daddy have a box? Negative Question: Why the teddy bear can’t go outside? Embedded Question: Ask him why can’t he go out? Stage 6: Able to do all types of questions.
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The Pre-School Years
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Pre-school development contains several aspects of language usage: – Lexis – Grammatical awareness – More various usage of language – Error and mistake rate decreases rapidly – Metalinguistic awareness
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Lexis: – The rate of vocabulary learning is for three to four year old children at several words a day Grammatical awareness: – At the age of four: most children can ask questions, give commands, report real events and create imaginery stories
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– They apply grammatical rules correctly and master basic structures of the language – Acqisition of more complex linguistic structures including passives and relative clauses
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More various usage of language: – Usage of language in a wider social environment – More interaction with unfamiliar adults – Communication to relatives on the phone – Awareness of several different “voices“
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Metalinguistic awareness: Metalinguistic awareness describes the ability to treat language as an object seperate from the meaning
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Example: “Drink the chair“ “Cake the eat“
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The School Years
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Pre-school language abilities expand and grow More sophisticated metalinguistic awareness (learning to read) Vocabulary growth Acquisition of different language registers
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Metalinguistic awareness: – Children learn to read (major boost in language acquisition) – Children learn: language has form and meaning (a word is separate from the thing it represents) – Discovering of ambiguity
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Vocabulary growth: – Entering school: hundreds/few thousands of words can be understood/produced – Several hundreds to more than 1000 words a year can be acquired – More different wordfields are explored (especially academic language)
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Language registers: – Children learn: How written language differs from spoken language How language differs depending on the social situation (principal vs. playground)
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How language differs depending on the literary quality of a text (science report vs. narrative) Some children: regional/ethnic language variety vs. standard variety
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Thank you for your attention
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