Language Acquisition: by Don L. F. Nilsen and Alleen Pace Nilsen
Language Acquisition: by Don L. F. Nilsen and Alleen Pace Nilsen
Language Acquisition: by Don L. F. Nilsen and Alleen Pace Nilsen
Youtube Babies:
Charlie Bit My Finger Again: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_OBlgSz8sSM Evil-Eye Baby: http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=evil+eye+baby&search_ty pe=&aq=0&oq=evil+ Funny Baby Blood: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9WmKre5O2I The Marshmallow Test: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWW1vpz1ybo
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LANGUAGE STAGES
Stage: Crying Cooing Babbling Intonation Holophrastic Pivot-Open Word Inflections Questions & Negatives Rare & Complex Lg Mature Speech
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Age: Birth 6 Weeks 6 Months 8 Months 1 Year 18 Months 2 Years 2 Years 5 Years 10 Years (Aitchison 570)
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CARETAKER SPEECH
Simplified Vocabulary Simplified Phonology Exaggerated Pitch & Intonation
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ACQUISITION OF SOUNDS
Properties of easy sounds: Front of the Mouth Total Articulation Muscles already Developed (in Nursing) Easy Sounds: /m, p, b, t, d/ Hard Sounds: /, , , , r, l/ clusters Easy sounds occur in more languages and are learned earlier by children. (Fromkin, Rodman & Hyams [2011] 333-335)
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ACQUISITION OF WORDS
vov-vov mooi dany quack dog moon bell sound duck sound
for dogs, kittens, hens, zoo animals
koko
rooster crowing
rooster, merry-go-round, musical sounds, all sounds
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[pun] spoon [peyn] plane [tIs] kiss [taw] cow [tin] clean [pol-r] stroller
[majtl] Michael [dajt-r] diaper [pati] Papi [mani] Momy [b-rt] Bert [b-rt] Big Bird (- is schwa) (Michael from 18-21 months)
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 341)
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Michael systematically substituted the alveolar stop [t] for the velar stop [k] as in his words for cow, clean, kiss, and his own name. He also replaced labial [p] with [t] when it occurred in the middle of a word, as in his words for Papi and diaper.
He reduced consonant clusters in spoon, plane, and stroller, and he devoiced final stops as in Big Bird. In devoicing the final [d] in bird, he created an ambiguous form [b-rt] referring both to Bert and Big Bird. (Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 341)
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Michaels substitutions are typical of the phonological rules that operate in the very early stages of acquisition. Other common rules are reduplication bottle becomes [baba], water becomes [wawa]; and the dropping of a final consonantbed becomes [be], cake becomes ke]. These two rules show that the child prefers a simple CV syllable. (Fromkin, Rodman & Hyams [2011] 341)
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[dot] dont
[kh Ip] skip [su] shoe [dt] that [ph e] play [d^p] thump [bt] bath
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ACQUISITION OF GRAMMAR
Holophrastic (one part of speech) Pivot-Open (two parts of speech) Telegraphic (four parts of speech) Adult (eight parts of speech)
NOTE: These stages also operate for adults learning a new profession (Moskowitz 533) (Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 336, 370-371)
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See boy See soci. Pretty boat. Pretty fan. More taxi. More melon.
Push it. Move it. Mommy sleep. Bye-bye melon. Bye-bye hot. (Adam, Eve, and Sarah)
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 369-370)
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M. L. U.
As children progress from the holophrastic to the pivot-open to the telegraphic to the mature stages of language development, a simple but effective gauge of their level of development is MLU.
MLU means Mean Length of Utterance. MLU is the average length of the utterances the child is producing at a particular point. (Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 347)
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TELEGRAPHIC SPEECH
During this stage of development, the functional categories like Determiners, Auxiliaries, Prepositions, Conjunctions and Expletives are missing. And the Lexical categories like Nouns, Verbs, Adjectives, and Adverbs (usually without any suffixes) are present.
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Cat stand up table. What that? He play little tune. Andrew want that. Cathy build house. No sit there. (Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 347)
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ACQUISITION OF MORPHOLOGY
AGE 2: Progressive ing: Plural s: Copula am, is, are: Articles a, the: I singing. blue shoes. He is asleep. He is a doctor.
(Aitchison 574)
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ACQUISITION OF MORPHOLOGY 2
AGE 3: Third Person Singular s: Past tense d: Full Progressive be + -ing: Shortened Copula: He wants an apple I helped Mummy I am singing Hes a doctor
Shortened Progressive:
Im singing
(Aitchison 574)
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CHILD: Nobody dont like me. MOTHER: No, say Nobody likes me. CHILD: Nobody dont like me. (dialogue repeated eight times) MOTHER: Now, listen carefully, say Nobody likes me. CHILD: Oh, nobody dont likes me. (Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 326)
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ADULT: What does [maws] mean? CHILD: Like a cat. ADULT: Yes, What else? CHILD: Nothing else. ADULT: Its part of your head. CHILD: [fascinated] ADULT: [touching childs mouth] Whats this? CHILD: [maws] (Neil Smith talking to 2-year-old Amahl) (Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2007] 327)
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CHILDRENS METAPHORS
Dont giggle me. I danced the clown. Yawny Babyyou can push her mouth open to drink her. Who deaded my kitty cat? Are you gonna nice yourself?
CF: Colorless green ideas sleep furiously. (Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2007] 361)
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WUG AS A NOUN
Make it plural. Make it possessive.
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WUG AS A VERB
Put it after he in a sentence. Make it past tense. Make it a past participle. Make it a present participle.
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 343-344)
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ACQUISITION OF NEGATIVES
Stage One: No you catch me. Stage Two: You didnt caught me. Stage Three: You didnt catch me. (Moskowitz 547)
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ACQUISITION OF WH-QUESTIONS
STAGE ONE: What Mummy doing? STAGE TWO: Where you will go? STAGE THREE: Where will you go? Why you singing? Why kitty cant see? Where daddy go? Why you dont know?
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CHILD: Want other one spoon, Daddy. FATHER: You mean, you want the other spoon. CHILD: Yes, I want the other one spoon, please Daddy. FATHER: Can you say, the other spoon?
CHILD: My teacher holded the baby rabbits and we patted them. ADULT: Did you say your teacher held the baby rabbits? CHILD: Yes ADULT: What did you say she did?
CHILD: She holded the baby rabbits and we patted them. ADULT: Did you say she held them tightly?
CHILD: No, she holded them loosely (Aitchison 566)(Cazden 92) (Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 325)
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ACQUISITION OF HUMOR
Even babies have a sense of humor. Adults laugh with children who are playing peek-aboo or watching Sesame Street with its Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch. Young children are also fond of knock-knock jokes and riddles. (Nilsen & Nilsen 9-10)
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TOILET HUMOR
Alvin Schwartz says that children who are six or seven enjoy toilet humor because they no longer have accidents, but they still remember when they did. They like the following poem:
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I see London; I see France. I see Betsys underpants. They arent green; they arent blue. Theyre just filled with number two. They also like to talk about the secret parts of the body:
Mary had a little bear, The best that she could find. And everywhere that Mary went, There was her bare behind. (Nilsen & Nilsen 11)
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CONSERVATION HUMOR
Paul McGhee told a joke to children of different ages: A man goes into a pizza parlor and tells the server to cut his pizza into four pieces because he isnt hungry enough to eat six pieces. 1st Graders didnt laugh because they didnt get the joke. They hadnt yet mastered conservation. (Nilsen & Nilsen 10)
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8th Graders didnt laugh because they had mastered conservation so long ago that there was no tension. The students in the middle grades laughed the hardest. They experienced pleasure because they could take pride in the fact that they were able to figure out that the amount of pizza was the same regardless of how many pieces it was cut into. (Nilsen & Nilsen 10)
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!LEVEL 2 (NORMATIVE): Involves a generalization that implies a rule, or a convention. Later, the child will violate the rule or convention. LEVEL 3 (EXPECTATION): Involves a reference to the unusualness or the improbability of an event. LEVEL 4 (RELATIONAL): Involves concern for inner motives related to a situation, relations among events, and multiple aspects of the situation. (Nilsen & Nilsen 10)
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!!LEVEL 5 (EXTRA-CONTEXTUAL): Involves context beyond the situation implied in the notion of parody, take-off, irony, or satire. It also involves the distinction between appearance and reality; the humor is revealed as contingent upon subtle aspects of events. LEVEL 6 (PHILOSOPHICAL): Involves the ability to see what is ridiculous in the nature of things and to generalize an outlook from humor examples. (Nilsen & Nilsen 10)
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!!!Summary of Life
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References: Aitchison, Jean. Predestinate Grooves: Is There a Preordained Language `Program? (Clark, 560-579). Bernstein, Basil. Class, Codes and Control: Three Volumes. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1971-1975. Braine, M. D. S. The Acquisition of Language in Infant and Child. in The Learning of Language Ed. C. E. Reed. New York, NY: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1971.
Cazden, Courtney. Child Language and Education New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1972.
Chapman, Antony J., and Hugh C. Foot, eds. Humor and Laughter: Theory, Research, and Applications. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, 1996.
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Clark, Virginia, Paul Eschholz, and Alfred Rosa. Language: Readings in Language and Culture, 6th Edition. New York, NY: St. Martins Press, 1998. Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman, and Nina Hyams. Language Acquisition. An Introduction to Language, 9th Edition. Boston, MA: Thomson Wadsworth, 2011, 324-374. Fromkin, Victoria, Stephen Krashen, Susan Curtiss, David Rigler and Marilyn Rigler. The Development of Language in Genie: A Case of Language Acquisition beyond the `Critical Period (Clark, 588-604).
Groch, A. Joking and Appreciation of Humor in Nursery School Children. Child Development 45.4 (1974): 1098-1102.
Heath, Shirley Brice. Teaching How to Talk in Roadville: The First Words (609-625).
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Hyams, Nina. Language Acquisition and the Theory of Parameters. New York, NY: D. Reidel Publishers, 1986. Lenneberg, Eric. Developmental Milestones in Motor and Language Development (Clark, 556-559). McGhee, Paul E. How to Develop Your Sense of Humor: An 8-Step Humor Development Training Program. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt, 1994. McGhee, Paul E. Humor and Childrens Development: A Guide to Practical Applications. New York, NY: Haworth, 1989. McGhee, Paul E. Humor Log for the 8-Step Humor Development Training Program. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt, 1994.
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Miller, George and Patricia Gildea. How Children Learn Words (Clark, 580-587). Moskowitz, Breyne. The Acquisition of Language (Clark, 529-555). Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen. Acquisition of a Sense of Humor. Encyclopedia of 20th Century American Humor. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2000, 9-11. Pines, Maya. Genie: A Postscript (Clark, 605-608).
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