Language - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Language

Description:

Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) Articulatory Phonetics Voice anatomy Semantics Meaningful cries: hunger, anger, pain Vocabulary Fast mapping 12 months = 1 word, 18=20, 24 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:60
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 46
Provided by: Thomp161
Learn more at: http://faculty.tamuc.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Language


1
Language
  • A system of rules
  • for using symbols
  • to share meaning

2
modes
Receptive Expressive



3
methods

Oral
Written
Visual
4

Receptive Expressive
Oral Listen Speak


5

Receptive Expressive
Oral Listen Speak
Written Read Write

6
Receptive Expressive
Oral Listen Speak
Written Read Write
Visual Appreciate Create
7
Receptive Expressive
Oral Listen Speak
Written Read Write
Visual Appreciate Create
Read aloud
8
Language Rule Systems
  • Phonology (sounds)
  • Semantics (meaning)
  • Syntax (structure)
  • Pragmatics (function)

9
Language Rule Systems
  • Gunning (2008, p. 4) adds two more
  • Morphology word formation (a part of syntax)
  • Prosody intonation and rhythm of speech (a part
    of pragmatics)

10
Phonology
  • 77 Phonemes
  • 45 in English
  • Intl. Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)
  • Articulatory Phonetics
  • Voice anatomy

11
Semantics
  • Meaningful cries
  • hunger, anger, pain
  • Vocabulary
  • Fast mapping
  • 12 months 1 word, 1820, 24270
  • Hart and Risley
  • Professional / Middle / Poor families
  • 11 / 6 / 3 million words by age 3
  • Over- and underextension

12
Syntax
  • Grammatical structure
  • S-V-O, S-O-V
  • Morphemes
  • Overregularization
  • Nouns, verbs, adjectives, articles
  • Conjunctions, embedded sentences, tag questions,
    ido-do, passive

13
Pragmatics
  • Communicative competence
  • Knowing when to speak, when not to, what to talk
    about and with whom, when, where, and in what
    manner to interact
  • Burst feeding

14
Pragmatics, continued
  • Infants must
  • Focus attention
  • Recognize gaze and gesture
  • Associate sounds and voices with certain events
    and people
  • Develop reciprocity
  • Use language to communicate

15
Pragmatics, continued
  • Cultural context
  • Dialect, hierarchy, space
  • Language functions
  • Halliday, Tough
  • Baron Affection, Control, Information, Pedagogy,
    Social exchange
  • Discourse - Tele-talk, greetings, lecture,
    caregiver speech

16
Language Acquisition Theories
  • Virtually every child, without special training,
    exposed to surface structures of language in many
    interaction contexts, builds for himself in a
    short period of time and at an early stage in his
    cognitive development a deep-level, abstract,
    and highly complex system of linguistic structure
    and use. (Lindfors 1987)

17
Nurture Behaviorism
  • Attention
  • Repetition
  • Approval (reinforcement)

18
Nature Nativist
  • Language Acquisition Device
  • Chomsky Colorless green ideas sleep furiously
  • Pinker Language Instinct (1995)

19
Biological Influences
  • Brains role
  • Hemispheric specialization
  • Brocas area structure
  • Wernickes area comprehension

20
Biological prewiring
  • Chomskys view Language Acquisition Device
  • Critical Period for Language
  • Case of Genie
  • Critical period not certain

21
Social interaction
  • Responsive interaction
  • Siegel human connections shape the neural
    connections from which the mind emerges
  • Bruners Language Acquisition Support System
    (LASS)
  • Caregiver speech

22
Social interaction
  • Piaget Thought and Language
  • Egocentric
  • Addressed to no one
  • Vygotsky Language and Thought
  • Private speech
  • Inner speech
  • Communication with the self

23
Social interaction
  • Whole Language approach
  • Emergent Literacy

24
Language Development Milestones
  • COOING
  • 4 weeks precursors to vowels
  • 8 weeks real vowels
  • 12 weeks discovers own voice
  • BABBLING
  • 6 months Echolalia
  • m, p, b, k, g with vowels
  • 8 months Vocables

25
Milestones
  • FIRST WORDS
  • 12 months
  • Holophrases
  • Overgeneralized speech

26
Milestones
  • TELEGRAPHIC SPEECH
  • Identificaton See doggie
  • Location Book there
  • Repetition More milk
  • Nonexistence Allgone thing
  • Negation Not wolf
  • Possession My candy
  • Attribution Big car
  • Agent-action Mama walk
  • Action-direct object Hit you
  • Action-indirect object Give Papa
  • Action-instrument Cut knife
  • Question Where ball?

27
Bilingualism
  • Simultaneous
  • Successive

28
Bilingualism
  • True Bilingual education
  • Teach immigrant children in native language
  • Add English gradually
  • Bilingualism does not interfere with language
    development.

29
Bilingualism
  • English as a Second Language
  • Content curriculum in English
  • Assistance in ESL
  • Intervention

30
Teaching
Receptive Expressive
Oral Listen Speak
Written Read Write
Visual Appreciate Create
Read aloud
31
Learning about speech
  • Prenatal auditory experiences influence neonatal
    auditory preferences
  • (DeCasper Spence 1986)
  • Caregiver speech
  • Extensions, expansions, recasts
  • Dramatic play
  • Metalinguistic awareness

32
Learning about Print
  • Environmental Print
  • Book Print

33
Learning about writing
  • Letter like forms
  • Constancy of position in space
  • Reversals
  • Dyslexia
  • Spacing
  • Spelling public and private (invented)

34
Learning about reading
  • Five Big Ideas in Early Literacy
  • Phonemic awareness
  • Phonics
  • Vocabulary
  • Comprehension
  • Fluency
  • (National Reading Panel, 1999)

35
Learning about reading
  • Alphabetic principle
  • Sight words
  • Part-to-whole instruction
  • Whole-to-part instruction
  • Genres
  • Baby board books
  • Predictable books
  • Fairy tales and Mother Goose
  • Poems and Songs

36
Reading aloud
  • is the single most important activity for
    building the understandings and skills that are
    essential for later reading success
  • NAEYC (1998) Learning to Read Write.

37
(No Transcript)
38
Language Development
  • Infancy
  • Vocalization Begins with babbling
  • Early communications are pragmatic
  • One-word (holophrase) stage 10 to 13 months
  • Two word (telegraphic) stage 18 to 24 months
  • Roger Brown Mean Length of Utterance (MLU)
  • Five stages of MLU index language maturity

39
Language Development
  • Early childhood Advances in
  • Phonology
  • Morphology
  • Syntax
  • Semantics
  • Pragmatics
  • Sequences of development
  • Words/vocabulary emerge (12 months)
  • Transition to combining words/phrases into
    sentences (24 months)
  • Transition to complex sentences (age 2 to 3
    through elementary years)

40
Middle and Late Childhood Reading
  • Challs model describes the development of
    reading in five stages with the first ranging
    from birth to first grade and the final stage in
    the high school years.

41
Debate
  • There is debate about the whole language approach
    vs. the basic skills--phonics approach.

42
Whole language approach
  • stresses that the learning to read should
    parallel the childs natural learning of
    language. The premise is that reading should be
    integrated with other skills.

43
Basic skills--phonics approach
  • emphasizes teaching phonetics and its rules for
    translating written symbols into sounds.

44
  • A combination of the two approaches is probably
    best.

45
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com