Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Language Acquisition
- What is Language?
- Arbitrary system of
symbols to transmit
and understand an
infinite variety of
messages (Brown, 1965)
- For shared, intended
communication (Bancroft, 1995)
- Spoken sounds are
used to encode
meaning (Barrett, 1999)
- People must be conventional
(use language the way
everyone uses it) and creative
(tailor to circumstances)
(Tomasello, 2000)
- Pre-Linguistic Development
- Infants are well prepared
to acquire language
- Have pre-wired
abilities (e.g. attending
to people over objects)
- Are born with a
sensitivity to language
- Attend to speech in
preference to other
sounds
- Can discriminate
phonemes in all languages
- Can recognise mother's
voice and language at birth
- Can recognise
familiar from
unfamiliar
utterances
- Key Components of
Language Development
- 1) Phonological
Development
- Phonology: rules
governing speech sounds
- Cooing (2 months) -
consonants are added and
babbling begins (6 months)
- first words (12 months)
- Limitations of the
vocal apparatus not
being fully developed
- Not necessarily
limitations with
cognition
(Ingram, 1986)
- Mostly
completed
by school
age
- 3) Grammatical
Development
- Rules governing
how words are
built from
morphemes and
how words are
combined
- Syntax (to create
well-formed sentences)
requires more than
one-word utterances
- Telegraphic speech emerges at 1-3 years - focus on
high content words showing grammatical ability (word
order) but not using small words/ morphemes (e.g. 'ed')
- Sentences
appear at
around 2-3
years
- Show correct
subject-verb-object
order
- Grammatical morphemes are
added (sometimes with errors
e.g. overregularisation)
- Complexity of
grammatical structures
steadily increases with age
- 2) Semantic
Development
- The meaning encoded
by language
- Young infants
learn 1-3 words per
month (quite slow)
- 12 months: typically
holophrases (can
usually comprehend
more than they can
produce)
- 18 months: words
are learnt more
rapidly, usually 14
words per month
('explosion' in ability)
- Development usually parallels ability
to categorise objects at their basic level
- 4) Pragmatic
development
- Rules governing
how language is
used in a given
context
- Conversational
turn-taking is
mastered at 12
months
- Games like 'peek-a-boo'
appear as child can
actively maintain flow
- Rules of
successful
interaction
start to
appear during
pre-school
years
- Children adapt
their speech to
the listener during
middle childhood
- Become more skilled to
judge others' knowledge (e.g.
using Theory of Mind skills)
- Children must acquire skill
in each of the 4 components
with certain skills being
more innate than others
- Theories of
Language
Development
- Behaviourist
Theory
- Language is learnt via
operant conditioning -
adults reinforce babbling to
shape sound and usage of
words in the correct context
- Reinforcement can
include parental
approval/ attention
but may not always
be explicit
- Imitation AND
reinforcement
- In Favour:
- Imitation and reinforcement are
sound principles in the lab etc
- Explain why children learn
local languages/ dialect
- Infants do imitate adult's speech
(Papousek & Papousek, 1989)
- Adult speech quality
affects child's learning
- children with mothers
who talk a lot have
children with larger
vocabularies
(Clarke-Stewart, 1973)
- Limitations:
- Does not explain grammatical errors
e.g. overregularisation (Pinker, 1995)
- Brown (1969) found that
mothers corrected content
more than grammar
- Reinforcement doesn't seem to
be a practical explanation for
the high rate of learning and the
capability of complex sentences
- Nativist Theory
- Proposed an innate capacity
for language acquisition
- Suggested that humans
possess an innate Language
Acquisition Device (LAD)
- The LAD detect
statistical regularities
in speech and forms
hypotheses about them
- The LAD then accepts
or rejects the
hypotheses accordingly
- Embodies rules of
universal grammar
- Humans are capable
of learning any
language this way
- Sentences have surface structure and
deep structure (the LAD processes the
surface structure to obtain meaning)
- Surface structure:
words and word order
- Deep structure: meaning
- Grammatical rules of deep structure are
shared by all languages ('universal grammar')
- Rules of universal grammar are
innate and embodied in the LAD
- In favour:
- There is language
across all cultures
- Children go through the same stages
of development of all languages
- Languages share universal
features (e.g. verbs and nouns)
- Bickerton, 1990:
immigrants
develop pidgin
language to
communicate (with
no consistent word
order) - they
developed a highly
grammatical creole
language - argued
that the children
possess a genetic
programme for
language
- Specific brain areas
have localised
language function
- Limitations:
- A single set of rules
governing all languages has
not yet been identified
- Does not acknowledge
the importance of
cognitive development
- Ignore effects
of social
experience
- Cognitivist Theory
- A child's cognition is
built from sensorimotor
experience - children
develop schemas for
objects and events
- Cognition
precedes
language
- Before age 2,
schemas
represent
sensorimotor
experience
- After age 2, the child
becomes capable of
symbolic thought -
language grows from
broader cognitive
capabilities
- Rules are required from
and reflect the child's
knowledge of the world
- Linguistic ability reflects the child's
stage of cognitive development
- Children of a particular age
have had similar experiences
and similar cognitions in a
similar order and therefore
are alike in linguistic ability
- The 'Cognition Hypothesis'
(Cromer, 1974) states that
children understand and use
particular linguistic structures,
only when their cognitive
abilities enable them
- In favour:
- Language emerges after object
permanence is achieved (taken
as evidence for symbolic
thought - cognitive capability)
- E.g. phrases such as "all gone" only
occur after object permenance
- Children's first
words are usually
familiar entities
(using knowledge
of the world
through
sensorimotor
experience)
- Limitations:
- Ignores the
importance of social
influence on learning
- Viewed children as 'little
scientists' - learning in a
solitary way and ignoring
the social influence
around them
- Social Interactionist
Theory
- Infants first learn about the
social world which provides
a basis for language
- The Language Acquisition
Support System (LASS) is
used to the explain the
social processing
underpinning language
- The LASS refers to the
importance of the child's
social support network -
works in conjunction
with innate mechanisms
to acquire language
- Led to a 'spiral curriculum'
which supports gradual
exposure to complex topics
- the way children learn
language
- Parents tend to assign
meaning the children's
utterances from
around 3 months
- The child plays a
role in maintaining
the flow in
conversational
turn-taking from
around 12 months
- From 6 months, the child
will follow the mother's gaze
(focusing of joint attention),
allowing for communication
about an object
- Around 9
months, the
child uses
gestures during
joint
communication
- In favour:
- Supports the
importance of
non-verbal social
behaviours
- Can explain poor
language skills when
children are raised with
little, poor, or no social
interaction
- Differences in the LASS are
thought to explain differences in LA
- Limitations:
- It is not clear
how it explains
development of
grammar
- Ignores
fundamental
perceptual
and cognitive
processes in
language
acquisition