Kategorier: Alla - grammar - phonics - methods - reading

av Kirsty Whitham för 12 årar sedan

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Child Language Acquisition

Children's reading development involves several key stages, beginning with the recognition that letters form words and these words consistently convey the same meanings. This foundational understanding is built upon learning the relationship between sounds and letters, and how words combine to construct meaningful sentences.

Child Language Acquisition

Speech Development

Child directed speech

Pragmatic development

Hallidays functions
Imaginative Language is used to create an imaginary enviroment. May accompany play
Heuristic Language is used to learn and explore the enviroment
Representational Language is used to convey facts and information
Personal Language is used to express ideas, opinions and individual identity
Interactional Language is used to develop social relationships and ease the process of interaction (phatic talk)
Regulatory Language is used to influence others' behaviour
Instrumental Language is used to fulfil a particular need

Negatives

Ursula Bellugi
STAGE THREE there is more variety in tense. 'not' is used after main verb. Improved a lot but still has some issues. E.G. 'this cant stick' or 'i not crying'
STAGE TWO cant and dont start being used but without variation of verb tense. No is still used but appeared mid-sentence. E.G. 'you cant dance' or 'he no bite you'
STAGE ONE producaes affirmative sentences with no added to the beginning or the end. E.G. 'no sit there' or 'not my bed'

Phonological development

6. Metathesis sounds in a word are swapped round 'relevant' becomes 'revelant'
5. Assimilation when sounds in a word are made to sound more like neighbouring ones 'dog' becomes 'gog'
4. Reduplication where a syllable in a word is repeated 'wee-wee' or 'night-night'
3.Substitution substituting harder sounds with easier ones; 'r' becomes 'w' 'th' becomes ''d,n or f' 't' becomes 'd' 'p' becomes 'b'
2. Addition breaking up consonant clusters by adding vowel to separated them; 'blue' becomes 'belu'
1. Deletion simplifying pronunciation by deleting certain sounds; the 't' being dropped in 'hat' or 'cat'

Asking questions

Inversion of auxilary and subject
Inversion of main verb and subject
Wh- questions
Rising intonation

Theories

LENNEBERG

CRITICAL PERIOD THEORY
The human brain is designed to acquire language at a certain time (first five years) and once this period has passed normal language development is no longer possible.

Genie - was locked up until the age of 13 never learned to speak fully.

BRUNER

SOCIAL INTERACTIONIST THEORY
Language is social. 'Children initially use language to get what they want'. Childrens language development is enriched and accelerated due to quantity and quality of social interactions with adults.

Clarke-Stewart found that children whose mothers talk more have larger vocabulary

PIAGET

COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
Language development goes hand in hand with the development of thinking and knowledge.

When seven year olds were taught phrases like 'more than' and 'less than' it did not help then grasp these concepts. The words are usually acquired after the concepts have been grasped

CHOMPSKY

INNATE
babies born with innate knowledge of the structure of language and speeds up their learning of their native language when they hear it.

Berko-Gleason found children were able to provide the plural of 'wug' the name of an imaginary creature, even though had never heard the word before

SKINNER

IMITATING
Children learn to speak by imitating their parents and being rewarded or punished according to the accuracty of their utterances.

Childen eventually learn to say 'went' instead of 'goed'. This seems to be learned through listening, imitating and correction

Learning to read

Harris and Coltheart

Subtopic
THE DISCRIMINATION NET STAGE
where children are beginning to pay attention to the orthography, but in a fragmentary way.
THE SIGHT VOCABULARY OR WHOLE WORD STAGE
where children recognise written words as a whole and are not aware of their internal orthographic strucutre

METHODS

Whole word schemes
based on recognising words as a whole

Arguments against; object to the often arbitary choice of words, which are not always closley related to childrens experiences

Argumaents for; system allows access to longer and more meaningful sentences, through frequently occuring words and the use of some longer words

Phonic schemes
based on identifying the regular sound letter relationship in a writing system. Child should use this to decode or constuct words.

Arguments against; A child will stuggle to blend individual sounds into a word and also point out that there are severe restrictions on the vocabulary

Arguments for; a child has a rationale for 'sounding out' new words

Stages of developing reading

Learning the conventions of punctuation and layout
Words go together to form sentences
words say the same thing every time
Realising that sound combine to make words
Realising letters make words
associating sounds and letters
Recongnising letters

Features borrowed from the oral tradition

Epithet as Metaphor
Rhythmic language
Proverb or Aphorism
Repeated formulae
Assonance
balanced sentence
Repeated epithet
Alliteration

FRAME WORK FOR ANALYSING CHILDRENS READING BOOKS

Features borrowed from the oral tradition of story telling; alliteration repeated epithet parallel sentence structures rhythmic language
Influences from everyday speech; face to face interactions familiar scenarios use of direct speech informal register repetition
Cohesion; repetition pronouns used after referent well established
Grammar; sentence types sentence lengths verb tense use of active or passive voice
Lexis and semantics; length of words types of words semantic field concrete/abstract nouns repetition
Graphology; page layout lineation pictures fonts/size of letters

Learning to write

Child Language Acquisition