1 / 14

Language Development

Language Development. By: Adam and Andrew Gubler. 6 Stages of Language development. Pre-linguistic Stage(0-10 months) One Word Sentence Stage(10-18 months) Two Word Sentence Stage(18-24 months) Multiple Word Sentence Stage(2-3 years old) More Complex Grammatical Structure(3-5 years)

tayte
Télécharger la présentation

Language Development

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. Language Development By: Adam and Andrew Gubler

  2. 6 Stages of Language development • Pre-linguistic Stage(0-10 months) • One Word Sentence Stage(10-18 months) • Two Word Sentence Stage(18-24 months) • Multiple Word Sentence Stage(2-3 years old) • More Complex Grammatical Structure(3-5 years) • Adult-like Language Structure(6 years+)

  3. Pre-linguistic Stage • The child needs to hear the language to be able to learn the language. • By 6 months the baby can tell if someone is speaking a foreign language or the native language of the baby • The baby understands rhythm, syllables, sounds, and cadence of spoken words

  4. One Word Sentence Stage • By 10 months the child understands around 10 words • Fis phenomenon occurs • Overextension • Under-extension • Learn about 2 words per week • Understand 10 times more than they can speak

  5. Two Word Sentence Stage • Naming Explosion happens • Learn 50-100 words per month • Cultural Differences • North America concentrates on nouns • East Asia concentrates on human interaction • Start to learn grammar

  6. Multiple Word Sentence Stage • By 2 years old the child knows about 500 words • Continue learning grammar and words, start to learn more verbs

  7. More Complex Grammatical Structure • By 3 the child uses correct word order • use plurals, tenses, and articles(ex. the, a) correctly • Grammar correlates with the size of the child’s vocabulary • Grammar also helps the child understand what people are saying better

  8. Adult-like Language Structure • By 6, the child knows 10,000 words • Fast-mapping • Learn 20 words per day • More flexible and logical use of grammar and vocabulary • Can use and understand metaphors • Learn formal and informal codes

  9. Hypotheses About Language Development in Children • Infants need to be taught(B.F. Skinner) • Infants teach themselves(Noam Chomsky) • Social impulses foster infant language learning

  10. Infants Need to Be Taught • Language learned step by step through association and reinforcement • Parents are expert teachers • Learn through frequent repetition • Well taught children will be well spoken children • If you want children to speak, understand, and read well, you need to talk to them

  11. Infants Teach Themselves • Language learning is innate • Language cannot be learned step by step • “Universal Grammar” • The mind is ready to learn whatever language is offered • The caregiver is a nutrient to learning a language but not the “trigger”

  12. Social Impulses Foster Infant Language Learning • People are social so the child will try to communicate any way it can • Children like the attention from trying to speak • Learn more through the emotional message, rather than the words used • Learn better through personal contact than through video

  13. Bilingualism • Children under 6 keep languages distinct but have the same activation site on the brain • In adults, languages usually have different activation sites • Pronunciation errors do not slow down learning in children • Children under 6 learn mostly just by listening to language • In middle childhood, learn by listening and also are assisted by instruction in language • Languages are best learned when connected with the culture • After puberty, learning a new language becomes more difficult • To learn a new language you need 3 thing • To practice speaking the language • Internal motivation to learn the language • A reason the language is needed

  14. Work Cited • Webspace.ship.edu • Psychology/ss/early-childhood-development_4.html • www.learninginfo.org • Invitation to the Life Span by: Kathleen Stassen Berger • cafemom.com • mercer.edu • http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-Xu-Ti4TrnEE/UGqlXiPci8I/AAAAAAAAAEU/YgKjPf50_Co/s1600/364843-5479-13.jpg • childrenschoice.com

More Related