1 / 19

Otto, Chapter 2: Learning and Language (22-51) Hennings, Chapter 3: Language and Children's Language Development (80-109

Otto, Chapter 2: Learning and Language (22-51) Hennings, Chapter 3: Language and Children's Language Development (80-109). Teaching Language Arts (EDU-105) Shannon Phillips. Behaviorist (B. F. Skinner). Operant conditioning

zona
Télécharger la présentation

Otto, Chapter 2: Learning and Language (22-51) Hennings, Chapter 3: Language and Children's Language Development (80-109

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. Otto, Chapter 2: Learning and Language (22-51)Hennings, Chapter 3: Language and Children's Language Development (80-109) Teaching Language Arts (EDU-105) Shannon Phillips

  2. Behaviorist (B. F. Skinner) • Operant conditioning • Stimuli, events, and responses interact to create associations with language (reading, writing, listening, etc.) • Schematic networks create maps and memories to assist recall (memory) • Language is taught through reinforcement (positive and negative)

  3. Behaviorist (cont.) • If children take active roles in language learning, they form better connections to learning. • Imitation, repetition, and imitative speech • Modeling (prosodic features, too!) • Dramatic play (telephone, role play, puppet shows, other activities?) • What are examples of behaviorist language acquisition (words, tone)? Can you connect to semantic, syntactic, and pragmatic knowledge?

  4. Nativist (Noam Chomsky) • Emphasizes “innate human capabilities” (25)—People have the ability and need to communicate in their biological structure • Focus: Cognitive structures the help move from the semantic to syntactic knowledge

  5. Universal Grammar—Language Acquisition Device • Universal Grammar: Rules that are necessary and present in all languages to allow for communication—brain can understand the structure in any language • Language acquisition device (LAD)—Why and how we teach grammar • Children’s need to learn how to communicate makes them active participants and they undergo constant hypothesis testing to learn.

  6. What Can You Include in the Classroom to Apply Nativist Theory? • Provide opportunities to use and explore language to encourage hypothesis testing and activate language acquisition devices (LAD) HOW? • Make large amounts and varieties of children’s literature available • Workstations for inner speech and socialized speech activities (communicate, draw, invent, listen, and write)

  7. Cognitive Developmental (Jean Piaget) • Language is acquired as maturation occurs and cognitive competencies (i.e., brain or synapses) develop

  8. Stages of Cognitive Development • Sensorimotor Stage (Infancy-2 years) • Receptive language stage moving to expressive language stage • Activities that focus on movement and the five senses (Baby Einstein and Lamaze products—black and white/mirrors, LeapFrog, and Dora) • Range is no language knowledge (trial and error nature of crying and cooing) to phonetic and semantic knowledge (Otto, 2002, p. 26-7) • Object permanence helps them understand how to manipulate • Schemata—beginning to recall and project (signs and symbols) to concepts • Interpersonal communication = key • Preoperational Stage (2-7 years) • Activities that encourage children to engage in symbol making and symbol manipulation • Imitate adult language and behavior • “think[ing] with words” (Hennings, 2002, p. 87)

  9. Stages of Cognitive Development • Concrete Operational Stage (7-11 ½ years) • Object manipulation, role play, and direct experience helps children make connections • Reality and fantasy, similarities and differences, ability to categorize improves • Concrete to generalizations about reality—critical thinking • Formal Operations (11/12 years and older) • Movement from concrete to generalization and abstract understanding

  10. Interactionist (Lev Vygotsky) • Emphasis is on the primary role of sociocultural interaction • “In teaching language, we are essentially teaching thought” (qtd. In Henning, 2002, p. 84). • What is the role and benefit of language acquisition support system (LASS)? • Emotional responses develop into ability to communicate them in socially responsible ways

  11. Interactionist (cont.) • Provide wide range of social interactions in which oral and written language are used in developmentally appropriate activities • Create a positive emotional context for social interactions • Social interaction is critical for language acquisition.

  12. Vygotsky and Piaget Agree:Thinking and Language are Tied Piaget • Language dev. // Cognitive dev. Vygotsky • Language dev. // Cognitive dev.

  13. Communicate and Think Figure 3.1 (Hennings, 2002, p. 83) Halliday’s Functions of Language (83) • Instrumental: “I want” • Regulatory: Control the behavior of others • Interactional: Social • Personal: Self-awareness and expressiveness (“Here I come …”) • Heuristic: Questioning … “Why?” • Imaginative • Informative: Adult thinking Toddlers (18 months) can get 1-6 but communicate them later.

  14. Experiential Learning—Inner Speech to Socialized Speech (Piaget and Halliday) • Hennings, p. 85 and Otto, pp. 31-2 • What is the role of experience in concept development? • Direct experience: Referent present • Vicarious experience: Referent not present • Describe literature as direct and vicarious experiences.

  15. Distancing Components of Symbol Formation Addressor Addressee Object/Action/Referent Symbol (word/picture) Eye Contact Shared References Gestures Touch Animated Speech (Verbal Cues) Communication Loops Adult-to-Child Speech Verbal mapping Expansion Questioning Mediation Concept Labels

  16. Discuss these concepts in relation to scaffolding. Linguistic scaffolding pattern • Questioning • Expansion (Recasting) • Repetition (Reinforcement)

  17. Zone of Proximal Development and Scaffolding Allows children to become • independent learners who can grasp higher learning concepts • behaviorally, can help them understand social morays better • Control language and behavior internally rather than someone else controlling their behavior • Adults can divide attention better • Setting: Informal and Formal • Routine(s) • Mediation

  18. Describe How an Adult Can Give Over Control of Interaction/Learning Completing a Puzzle Reading a Book

  19. Our Role • Learning activities at home and at school should reflect consideration of a child’s developmental needs • Physical • Emotional-social • Cognitive-linguistic • Creating a developmentally appropriate learning environment

More Related