Cla Flashcards

1
Q

Piaget

A

Stages of congnitive development 1936
• sensorimotor (age 0-2): child egocentric, begins to interact with world and use sense/movement
• pre-operational (age 2-7): still egocentric, learning to speak and develop imagination, begin to think symbolically and question often

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2
Q

Halliday

A

Functions of child language 1975
• instrumental - fulfil a need e.g. drink
• interactional - builds relationships
• heuristic - question world around
• regulatory - control care givers behaviour
• personal - express own feelings
• imaginative - explore creativity during play
• representational - exchange information

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3
Q

Brown

A

MLU (mean length utterance) 1973
• 15-30 months - 1.75
• 28-36 months - 2.25
• 36-42 months - 2.75

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4
Q

Examples of CDS not being important

A

Kalui tribe 1984 in Papa New Guinea

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5
Q

Catherine Garvey

A

Play 1977
• play is important
• allows babies to develop heuristic and imaginative language (Halliday)
• allows babies to work collaboratively

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6
Q

Dr Casper Addyman

A

Babies prefer motherese (high energy, sing song tone)

However there is no evidence to suggest it develops babies language better

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7
Q

Eve Clark

A

Over and under extension
• over extension: more specific term used for a more general noun e.g. all men “daddy”
• under extension: think “car” only refers to mummy’s car
• proves that precise understanding comes after initial acquisition of a word

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8
Q

Clarke-Stewart

A

Study in 1973
• found that children whose mothers talked more had larger vocabularies
• shows that children are influenced by those around them

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9
Q

Katherine Nelson

A

Corrections 1973
• found that children at the holophrastic stage whose mothers corrected them on word choice and pronunciation actually advanced more slowly than those with mothers who were generally accepting

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10
Q

Berko and Brown

A

“Fis” test 1960
• spoke to a child who said fish as “fis”. Brown replied also with “fis”. Child said “no, fis” to which brown responded with “fish”. Child said yes “fis”
• study shows that babies do not hear themselves like they hear others and no amount of correcting will change this

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11
Q

Pinker

A

Supports Nativism 1994
• need to develop language is unique to humans
• instinctive like a spider’s ability to create a web
• innate ability in our brain

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12
Q

Bancroft

A

Turn taking 1996

• traditional games such as peekabo imitate turn taking

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13
Q

Bloom

A

Mummy sock study 1973

• proved that during the telegraphic stage, inflectional suffixs such as plural “s” and past tense “ed” are often absent

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14
Q

Mehler

A

Language recognition test 1988

• a study that proved a 4 day old french baby was able to distinguish French from other languages

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15
Q

Fitzpatrick

A

Heart rate of unborn baby 2002
• heart rate of a bay in the womb slows when it hears it’s mother’s voice
• suggests a calming, soothing influence

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16
Q

Skinner

A

Behaviorism 1957
• came up with operant conditioning
• positive and negative feedback
• supports Aristotle’s concept of “Tabula Rasa” (blank slate)

17
Q

Bruner

A
LASS 
• Language Acquisition Support System
• response to Chomsky's LAD
• scaffolding
• came up with CDS
18
Q

Vygotsky

A

Interactionalism (ideas popularised in the 70’s)
• stressed the importance of doing and the usefulness of caregivers
• more knowledgeable other
• zone of proximal development

19
Q

Chomsky

A

Nativism 60’s
• universal grammar
• LAD
• virtuous errors prove universal grammar

20
Q

Tomasello

A

Usage based model 2003
• ability to develop language is socially driven (human pre-disposition to cooperate and collaborate)
• relies on the same cognitive processes and learning to walk and ride a bike
• identified that by age 9-12 months, children gain the ability to form patterns, language can only be learnt by being used

21
Q

Sinclair and Coulthard

A

IRF 1975

• Initiation Response Feedback

22
Q

Features of CDS

A
  • higher or melodic pitch
  • more frequent and longer pauses
  • slower and clearer speech
  • repetition
  • grammatically simpler sentences
  • more questions
  • use of diminutives
  • use of nouns rather than pronouns
  • expansion - where the caregiver elaborates on the utterance given by the child
  • recasts - where the caregiver may repeat a child’s utterance but provide a correct version e.g. “I runned” - “you ran?”
  • mitigated imperatives
23
Q

Jean Berko Gleason

A

Wug test 1958
• over 75% of children able to identify that the plural of one wug are “wugs”
• argued as proof of universal grammar as no child would have seen this example before
Investigation of male vs female caregivers 1975
• concluded that fathers tended to tease chldren more and use more commands
• the child was referred to the mother should any domestic arise
• study was over 40 years ago, often criticised as outdated

24
Q

Stages of child language development

A
  • pre-verbal: before speech
  • non-verbal: non speech actions e.g. pointing (accessed at any stage)
  • holophrastic: sounds that express meaning (often monosyllabic
  • two word: two different sounds
  • telegraphic: connective grammar introduced e.g. “apple I have”, knowledge of determiners, pronouns, plurality and tense is still limited
  • post telegraphic: complete language
25
Q

Lenneburg

A
Critical period (popularised by Lenneburg) 
• roughly between the ages of around 2 and 13 where children are most receptive to language development
26
Q

Bard and Sachs

A

Case study of Jim 1977
• son of deaf parents
• despite being exposed to the tv and radio, his speech was severely under developed
• this implies that social interaction is necessary and crucial to develop speech

27
Q

Bellugi

A

Pronoun development
• Stage 1 - Child refers to him or herself using his/her name. Pronouns are not used
• Stage 2 - Personal pronoun ‘I’ appears followed by ‘me’, placement within the sentence is not always secure
• Stage 3 - The child understands the subject/object positions of ‘I’ and ‘me’. Second and third person pronouns are introduced.