Spoken Language Acquisition Quiz

Description

Quiz of key information about child language acquisition theorists.
Izzy Backhouse
Quiz by Izzy Backhouse, updated more than 1 year ago
Izzy Backhouse
Created by Izzy Backhouse over 7 years ago
28
1

Resource summary

Question 1

Question
• Leslie [blank_start]Rescorla[blank_end] – [blank_start]1980[blank_end] Studied children's [blank_start]overextensions[blank_end] and established 3 main types: 1) Categorical = a word for a member of one category is extended to other members of the same category. eg. using 'apple' to label all fruit 2) [blank_start]Analogical[blank_end] = a word for one object used for another object that bears a similar function of physical attribute. eg. calling a hat a 'hairbrush' (as both are used on head) 3) [blank_start]Predicate[blank_end]/Mismatch Statements = a word used to make a statement in relation to another object. eg. saying 'Dolly' upon seeing an empty doll's bed Findings showed that the majority of a child's overextensions were [blank_start]categorical[blank_end]. - [blank_start]25[blank_end]% mismatch statements - 15% [blank_start]analogical[blank_end]
Answer
  • Rescorla
  • 1980
  • overextensions
  • Analogical
  • Predicate
  • categorical
  • analogical
  • 25

Question 2

Question
What type of theorist was Chomsky?
Answer
  • Behaviourist
  • Nativist
  • Constructivist
  • Genetic epistemologist

Question 3

Question
What type of theorist was Skinner?
Answer
  • Behaviourist
  • Constructivist
  • Nativist
  • Genetic epistemologist

Question 4

Question
What type of theorist was Bruner?
Answer
  • Genetic epistemologist
  • Nativist
  • Constructivist
  • Behaviourist

Question 5

Question
What type of theorist was Piaget?
Answer
  • Nativist
  • Behaviourist
  • Genetic epistemologist
  • Constructivist

Question 6

Question
What is the Zone of Proximal Development?
Answer
  • All the different things a child needs to learn in order to progress.
  • The difference between what a learner can do without help and what he or she can do with help.

Question 7

Question
What is 'scaffolding'?
Answer
  • A term closely related to ZPD, developed by other sociocultural theorists applying Vygotsky's ZPD to educational contexts.
  • The process of increasing a child's self-confidence by working closely with their peers until they no longer need the support.
  • Scaffolding is a process through which a teacher or more competent peer gives aid to the student in her/his ZPD as necessary, and tapers off this aid as it becomes unnecessary, much as a scaffold is removed from a building during construction.

Question 8

Question
Complete the table to show the stages of cognitive development according to Piaget's theory.
Answer
  • Sensorimotor
  • Preoperational
  • Concrete Operations
  • Formal Operations

Question 9

Question
Genetic [blank_start]epistemology[blank_end] (theory of [blank_start]cognitive[blank_end] development): [blank_start]Piaget[blank_end] believed that cognitive development is [blank_start]facilitated[blank_end] by providing activities or situations that engage learners and require adaptation. [blank_start]Assimilation[blank_end] = a cognitive process that manages how we take in new information and incorporate that new information into our [blank_start]existing[blank_end] knowledge. [blank_start]Accommodation[blank_end] = the altering of previous concepts in the face of new [blank_start]information[blank_end].
Answer
  • epistemology
  • cognitive
  • Piaget
  • facilitated
  • Assimilation
  • existing
  • Accommodation
  • information

Question 10

Question
Piaget - [blank_start]Egocentrism[blank_end] Childrens' thoughts and communications are typically egocentric (i.e. about [blank_start]themselves[blank_end]). Egocentrism = child's [blank_start]inability[blank_end] to see a situation from another person's point of view. According to Piaget, the egocentric child assumes that other people see, hear, and feel exactly the [blank_start]same[blank_end] as the child does.
Answer
  • Egocentrism
  • themselves
  • inability
  • same

Question 11

Question
Who studied the acquisition of children's inflections?
Answer
  • Katherine Nelson - 1973
  • Brown - 1973
  • Jean Aitchison - 1987

Question 12

Question
In 1973, [blank_start]Brown[blank_end] studied children's language development between 20 and 36 months and found a regularly occurring sequence in the acquisition of [blank_start]inflections[blank_end]. 1) [blank_start]-ing[blank_end] 2) plural 's' 3) [blank_start]possessive 's'[blank_end] 4) past tense -ed 5) [blank_start]3rd person singular verb ending[blank_end] eg. he sings 6) auxilarly verb [blank_start]'to be'[blank_end] eg. I am dancing
Answer
  • Brown
  • Aitchison
  • Cruttenden
  • inflections
  • lexis
  • -ing
  • possessive 's'
  • 3rd person singular verb ending
  • 'to be'

Question 13

Question
Cruttenden [blank_start]1979[blank_end], divided the acquisition of inflections into 3 stages: 1) Children memorise words [blank_start]on an individual basis[blank_end]. 2) Awareness of general rules of inflections develops. [blank_start]Overgeneralisations[blank_end] occur at this stage, eg. 'runned' instead of 'ran' 3) Correct inflections are used.
Answer
  • Overgeneralisations
  • Undergeneralisation
  • Predicate statements
  • on an individual basis
  • in groups
  • 1979
  • 1989
  • 1999
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