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Lang Dis Exam 1

Illinois State CSD 321

QuestionAnswer
What are the 5 domains of language +bonus? phonology, semantics, morphology, syntax, pragmatics, + proxemics
What is typical early phonological development? -crying, vegetative sounds -cooing (3 mo), laughing (3.5 mo), vocal play (3.5 mo) -reduplicated babbling (6 mo) -variegated babbling
What are some early speech sound errors? voicing: voiced initial, unvoiced end (time->dipe) manner: stops, plosives, & stopplosives place: fronting
What is typical later phonological development? -phonological complexity of children's words increase over time -liquids, clusters, and fricatives emerge -"most kids have most sounds by age 4"
What are some later speech sound errors? cluster reduction, liquid gliding (or other liquid errors), & fricative errors
What is typical early semantic development? -first words at 12 mo -fast-mapping and probabilistic -babies understand emotions and intent before meaning. -respond to name at 4 mo -first words = parents names, no, preferred foods, preferred items, onomatopoeia -50 words by 18 mo 200 words by 24
How does early semantic development occur? QUIL (Quick Incidental Learning) and Probabilistic Learning
What is typical later semantic development? -approx. 10K words @ K, approx. 40K words @ HS grad, approx. 60K words @ college grad
How does later semantic development occur? Abstract, Literate, and Morphologically Complex Vocabulary
What is typical early morphological development? -use inflectional morphemes during second year -first = plural -s and -ing
What is typical later morphological development? -school aged kids rely heavily on derivational morphemes for vocabulary acquisition -English contains more that 100 affixes
What is the difference between derivational and inflectional morphemes? derivational morphemes change the gramatical category of the word (teach -> teacher) and inflectional just changes the meaning (tall -> taller).
What is typical early syntactic development? -kids begin combining words when they have 50 words in their expressive vocab (about 18 mo) -early sentences often fit into predictable categories -browns morphemes -MLU is about = to age
What is typical later syntactic development? 1/2 -MLU >10 for adolescents in expository tasks -growth driven by syntactic complexity: subordinate clauses, relative clauses, noun clauses, adverbial clauses, elaborated noun phrases
What are locutionary, illiocutionary, and perlocutionary acts? loccutionary: what is said illocutionary: what the speaker means pelocutionary: what the listener does with the information.
What is typical early pragmatic development? 1/2 -com intent, preverbal: directing another's attention, requesting, protesting, greetings/farewells, responding (carrying out action), turn taking. -com intent, verbal: all of the above + labeling, commenting continue on the next slide
What is typical later pragmatic development? -improved topic management skills -awareness of register (location and social atmosphere determines pragmatics), ability to codeswitch -use of language for multiple purposes (conversation, narrative, exposition)
What is typical narrative development? -heaps (2 years) -sequences (2-3 years) -primitive narrative (3-4 years) -unfocused chains (4-4.5 years) -focused chains (5 years) -true narrative
What is typical metalinguistic development? toddlers and preschoolers toddlers: repair, practice, adjust their language preschoolers: check on others' understanding, comment on their own and others' utterances, correct others, practice new sounds/words
What is typical literacy development? Baby/Toddler and Early Preschooler baby/toddler: attends to books, turns pages, scribbles, uses jargon to "read", recites favorite bits, notices adult errors early preschooler: makes letter-like shapes, recites longer phrases/stories, shows interest in books and print
What should we know about second language acquisition? -learning two languages in early childhood is normal -circumstantial v elective -simultaneous vs sequential -additive vs subtractive -efficiency principle
What is typical play development? -solitary play -spectator play -parallel play -associative play -cooperative play
What is typical cognitive development? -sensorimotor -pre-operational: age 7 7=age of reasoning -concrete operational: 7-10 years still difficult to form abstract idea -formal operational: develop abstract ideas
What is the Biological Maturation Theory? nature, language arises from sections of brain, genetics + environmental influences, brain structures and functional MRI, pruning
What is the Linguistic Innateness Theory? nature, Chomsky, LAD, universal grammar, "part of what makes us human", recursion, kids only need a tiny bit of exposure, problematic af
What is Behaviorist Theory? nurture, BF Skinner, language due to consequences, result of opperant conditioning, cons: blurs intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, doesn't explain why kids are able to develop language they have never heard before
What is Connectionist (Information Processing) Theory? language and cognition go hand in hand, use same strategy for language acquisition as you do for other skills, plasticity after head injury, capacity to teach language to computers
What is Constructionist Theory? Piaget, Schema (set of rules that govern our understanding of how things are gonna go), language driven by higher level cognitive processes
What is Social Interactionist Theory? Vygotsky, people around us shape our ability, scaffolding, MKO: more knowledgeable other, ZPD: Zone of Proximal Development
What is Cognitive Emotional Theory? Greenspan, focus on well being as driver for cognition, healthy brain structures and healthy relationships, can't learn in the absence of emotional security
What is typical early pragmatic development? 2/2 -budding skills: awareness of presuppositions (comprehension of appropriate level of background to explain), repair strategies (both influenced by theory of mind) and paralinguistic info.
What is typical metalinguistic development? school-age school-age: judge appropriateness (grammatical and social) of language,break sentences into parts, define words, construct puns and riddles.
What is typical literacy development? Mid-Primary and Secondary mid-primary 4th grade: learning to read -> reading to learn, self correction improves, written work is comprehensible late-primary/secondary: able to analyze ideas in text, critical reading emerges
What is typical literacy development? Late Preschooler and Primary late preschooler: connects print with spoken language, begins reading environmental print, writes some letters primary: decodes words, understands that words are made of sounds, learns some sight words, begins to write
What is typical later syntactic development? 2/2 -verb complexity increases: progressive verbs, modal verbs, perfect aspect, subjunctive mood, passive voice, verbals -pronoun complexity: reflexive, indefinite pronouns, interrogative/relative pronouns
Created by: hannah.hogue
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