theories of child language acquisition (see 8.1)

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Theories of Child Language Acquisition (see 8.1)

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Theories of Child Language Acquisition (see 8.1). * Imitation * Reinforcement * Innateness * Active construction of a grammar * Connectionism * Social interactionism. IMITATION. Children learn language by imitating words/sentences spoken around them. True, but only in part. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Theories of Child Language Acquisition

(see 8.1)

Page 2: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

*Imitation

*Reinforcement

*Innateness

*Active construction of a grammar

*Connectionism

*Social interactionism

Page 3: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

IMITATIONIMITATION• Children learn language by imitating

words/sentences spoken around them.• True, but only in part.• Cannot explain systematic errors children

make- departures from adult forms.• Cannot account for production (and

perception) of novel utterances• Cannot explain situation involving

disability affecting ability to speak, which, once overcome, results in realization of what has been learned.

Page 4: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Reinforcement

• Parents’ correction of errors-not as common as we think; usually don’t help.

Page 5: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Innateness Hypothesis

• Children are born with, at minimum, the ability to acquire any language and, possibly, the actual knowledge of linguistic universals.

• Critical age hypothesis: after an particular age is reached, acquisition of a language becomes much more difficult (if not impossible).

• Be familiar with support for / arguments against the Critical Age Hypothesis in its strongest form.

Page 6: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Active construction of a grammar

• Ability to develop rules is innate

• Children construct the rules based on exposure to input from the adult language.

• These rules are built on and modified as a result of new input.

Page 7: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Connectionism

• Language learning involves the creation of neural connections in the brain as a product of children listening to and using language around them.

• Learning is driven by statistical information. That is, generalizations can be arrived at on the basis of frequency of structures of a certain kind in the input, rather than the existence of an innate ability to invent rules.

Page 8: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Social interaction theory

• Not incompatible with statistical learning and rule construction theories.

• Just stresses the extent to which language acquisition depends on interactions between children and their older peers and care givers.

Page 9: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

PHONETIC AND PHONOLOGICAL PHONETIC AND PHONOLOGICAL ACQUISTIONACQUISTION

Page 10: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

(1) infant speech perception. Evidence from studies.

(2) early vocalizations: crying, cooing, etc.

(3) BABBLINGBABBLING begins at 4 -6 months. Both vowels and consonants are produced, often in short sequences. Canonical babbling (7-10 months) occurs when syllables are repeated in sequence. Variegated babbling (10-12 months) occurs when different syllables occur in sequence.

* functions* cross-linguistic tendencies

Page 11: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

(4) 10-12 months: child is acquiring a variety of speech sounds, including but not limited to those occurring in the sound inventory of native language.

evidence that as first words begin to appear, knowledge of phonemic system is not yet intact.

(5) 1.5 - 2 years: becomes more necessary for phonemes to be acquired in order to be able to attribute meaning to random clustering of sounds.

Page 12: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Acquisition of phonology: common views / points of debate

• Continuity vs. discontinuity • Perception and production• Usefulness of relational vs. independent

system accounts.• Phonological universals and emergence of

phonology.

Page 13: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Order in which speech sounds are mastered: general trends...

1 - vowels acquired before consonants

2- stops acquired first among consonants

3- labials often acquired first and interdentals last.

4- new phonemic contrasts manifest themselves first in word-initial position first.

Page 14: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

COMMON PHONETICS PROCESSES IN CHILDREN’S SPEECH...

1 - deletion 1 - deletion

2- substitution2- substitution

3- assimilation3- assimilation

Page 15: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

1. Deletion

1. stov tov; sml ml; dsk dk• [s] + consonant sequences - delete

[s]

2. tray tay; brum bum; slm sm• stop + liquid - delete liquid3. frm fm; slip sip• fricative + liquid: delete liquid4. bmp bp; dnt dt • nasal + voiceless stop - delete nasal

Page 16: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

2. Substitution

1. lajn yajn; rejk wejk; lf yf • gliding

2. si ti; zibr dibr • continuant becomes stop3. bim bib; pajn pajd• denasalization

Page 17: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

3. Assimilation

1. tl dl; pg bg; sup zup • voicing assimilation of initial

consonants

2. dagi gagi; slf flf ; bebi bibi • total assimilation (vowel/consonant)

Page 18: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Syllables• In earliest stages maximally simple syllables

tend to be produced (without codas, without clusters).

• Asymmetries between syllable-initial and syllable final position

• Unstressed syllable truncation is a common process.

Page 19: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

PERCEPTION v. PRODUCTIONPERCEPTION v. PRODUCTION:

child's ability to perceive phonemic contrast precedes their ability to produce them.

Page 20: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Relationship between stages of acquisition in children and crosslinguistic grammars.

• Rules which present themselves in stages of child phonological development often resemble very closely those attested crosslinguistically in adult languages, even when absent from the adult language being learned.

• Do you find that this supports a particular theory of language acquisition?

Page 21: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

ONE EXAMPLE

• UNIVERSAL GRAMMAR = SET OF UNIVERSAL CONSTRAINTS

• LANGUAGES DIFFER IN CONSTRAINT RANKINGS, RATHER THAN CONSTRAINTS THEMSELVES.

• LEARNING A PHONOLOGICAL GRAMMAR IS ALL ABOUT LEARNING THE RIGHT RANKING OF CONSTRAINTS.

Page 22: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

MORPHOLOGICAL MORPHOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTDEVELOPMENT

Page 23: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Developmental sequence of

nonlexical morphemes

Page 24: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

1. -ing

2. plural -s

3. possessive -s

4. the, a

5. past tense -ed

6. 3rd person sg. -s

7. auxiliary be

Page 25: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

What determines this sequence?

1.frequency?2.Word-position3.Relationship b/t form and meaning4.Syllabicity5.Exceptions6.Allophonic invariance

Page 26: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

SYNTACTIC DEVELOPMENT

Page 27: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Stages of development

0. First words

1. One word stage

2. Two word stage

Telegraphic speech

3. Later stages

Page 28: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Syntactic development: specific examples of gradual acquisition of adult constructions.

NEGATION: stages

QUESTIONS: stages

SEE DISCUSSION IN BOOK

Page 29: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Semantic development

Page 30: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Rapid vocabulary expansion

Largest category of words in child’s early vocabulary?

How do children “guess” meanings of unknown words?

Common semantic errors

Page 31: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

ACQUISTION OF MEANING

common errors include undergeneralization, overgeneralization and complexive concepts.

After child acquires close to 100 words, the overgeneralized meanings narrow and the undergeneralized meanings extend.

Page 32: Theories of Child  Language Acquisition   (see 8.1)

Later acquired concepts• Relational terms

• Deictic expressions