Tutorial Slides Week 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Language Acquisition

A
  • Language is acquired during childhood through a series of stages
  • Each stage has its own unique features
  • These stages of language acquisition are UNIVERSAL
  • -Children in ALL cultural groups progress through the stages of language acquisition in the same sequence
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2
Q

Stages of Language Acquisition of Language

A
  • Prelinguistic Speech
    • Crying.
    • Cooing.
    • Babbling.
  • Linguistic Speech
    • Holophrastic speech.
    • Two word utterances.
    • Telegraphic speech.
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3
Q

Biological Basis for Language Acquisition

A
  • Language Acquisition is universal and invariant in sequence
  • This indicates that language is biological in nature
  • Evidence exists to demonstrate that environmental input is also a significant factor in language development
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4
Q

Simplified Language

A
  • Snow (1972)
  • Language used by adults in interactions with young children is qualitatively and quantitatively different to that used conversing with adults.
  • Adults simplify their language significantly when talking to young language learners.
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5
Q

Parentese

A
  • The simplifications characterising the language directed by adults toward young language learners.
  • deVilliers and deVilliers (1979)
  • NINE linguistic patterns typify parentese
  • Parentese PLUS grammatical corrections were found to be important for language acquisition.
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6
Q

9 Features of Parentese

A
  1. Simple and short sentences.
  2. Exaggerated intonation contours in speech.
  3. Long pauses between sentences.
  4. Stress on most important words in sentence or clause.
  5. Frequent repetitions.
  6. Prompting:
    • Rephrasing the sentence if it appears that the child has not understood.
  7. Echoing:
    • Repeating what the child has said, especially if an incomplete sentence or phrase.
  8. Expansion:
    • Child’s sentence or phrase is restated in a more linguistically sophisticated form.
  9. Recasting:
    • Child’s sentence is rephrased in a different way, while still maintaining the same meaning.
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7
Q

Morphemes

A
  • Smallest grammatical unit in a language.-
  • Two types:
    • Free → function as words (e.g., tree).
    • Bound → Found as parts of words, always with a root (e.g., ed to form past tense).
  • Example: Un-touch-able (3 different morphemes)
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8
Q

Mean Length of Utterance (MLU)

A
  • Calculate mean length of utterance:
  • Count the number of morphemes in the child’s speech.
  • Count the number of utterances (units of speech bound by silence, could be a sentence) she makes.
  • Divide the number of morphemes by the number of utterances.

MLU = N Morph/N Utter

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9
Q

MLU Description

A
  • Measure of child’s linguistic productivity.
  • Higher MLU is taken to indicate a higher level of language proficiency.
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