1 / 9

First Language Acquisition

First Language Acquisition. Lecture #16. First Language Acquisition. Why do we call it language acquisition? Learning Intentional process Presupposes teaching Teacher controls pace Acquisition Unconscious process Does not presuppose teaching Child controls pace.

katen
Télécharger la présentation

First Language Acquisition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. First Language Acquisition Lecture #16

  2. First Language Acquisition • Why do we call it language acquisition? • Learning • Intentional process • Presupposes teaching • Teacher controls pace • Acquisition • Unconscious process • Does not presuppose teaching • Child controls pace

  3. First Language Acquisition • How do nurture and nature interact in FLA? • Nature • Must have LAD—poverty of stimulus too great to learn without “language instinct” • All children learn a language; have language capacity • Overgeneralizations demonstrate child is analyzing language • Nurture • Children cannot acquire language without interaction/scaffolding • Children learn the language of their environment; through parents who model social interaction • Memorization of chunks by rote demonstrates not all info is anlayzed fully

  4. Four Pillars of FLA • Ability • Physiological • Cognitive • Interaction • Scaffolding (Caretaker speech) • Motivation • Internal vs. External • Instrumental vs. Integrative • Data • Forms • Meaning • Function • Targeted/limited vocab • Exaggerated intonation • Repetition • Questioning

  5. Critical Period Hypothesis • There is an ideal window of opportunity within which we are primed to acquire language: birth - puberty • Evidence? • Adults struggle to learn a second language (to a greater or lesser degree) • The question is why? • We struggle with both the physiological and the cognitive ability.

  6. Stages of First Language Acquisition • Prelinguistic Sounds • 0-1 mo. Sleep, eat, cry • 1 mo. Intonational patterns • 2-5 mos. Cooing stage • 5-12 mos. Babbling stage • One-word Stage (holophrastic) • 1 yr. emergence of first word (controversial) • 1 yr., 6 mos. Holophrastic stage • intonation layers on meaning • ‘fis’ phenomenon

  7. Stages of First Language Acquisition • Two-word Stage • 2 yrs. Two words, three possible interpretations • Subject-verb ‘Mary go.’ • Verb-modifier ‘Push truck.’ • Possessor-possesed ‘Mommy sock’ • Content words, no function words • Telegraphic Stage • 2 yrs., 6 mos. telegraphic stage • 2-5 words with little extra morphology • Morphological overgeneralization • Easier, more productive morphemes first

  8. Stages of First Language Acquisition • Telegraphic Stage, cont. • 2-5 yrs. More elaborate syntax • Learning 20-30 words per day • Semantic overgeneralization/ undergeneralization • Fine-tuning • 5-10 yrs. Refining grammar, building vocabulary • How children learn vocabulary: • Assign word to a broad semantic category • Work out distinctions among words in that category

  9. Building Vocabulary • Traditional efforts: • Flash cards • Look it up in the dictionary— what is the problem here? • Better to learn vocab in context: • Reading • Conversation • Language learning software How can you help your children develop their language skills the most?

More Related