Lecture 11(B) - Language Acquisition pt. 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Prelinguistic communication

A
  • sounds, facial expressions, gestures, imitation
  • babbling begins at about 8 mnths
    • intentional vocalization
    • lacks meaning
  • due to exposure of lang before birth
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2
Q

First words

A
  • occur btwn 10-14 mnths
  • easy to pronounce, things that are in their environment, reflects things they hear
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3
Q

Holophrase

A
  • single word used to express a complex idea
  • rely on context and gesture (IE: point to toy aisle and says “ball”, could be asking for parent to buy them a ball)
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4
Q

Baby signing

A
  • teaching infants to communicate w/ symbolic gestures
  • NOT a language
  • no evidence of accelerating language development, decreasing tempertantrums, etc.
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5
Q

Vocabulary spurt

A
  • dramatic acceleration of word learning
  • occurs at about 18 mnths bc they become capable of mental representation
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6
Q

Fast mapping

A
  • disambiguation of meaning of unfamiliar word, often after a single/limited exposure
  • begins word learning process
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7
Q

Extended mapping

A
  • retention of a new word
  • deeper processing (IE: definition, purpose of the word, used in context)
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8
Q

Linguistic inaccuracies

A
  • extension errors common in early childhood
  • under extension: words used too restrictively (family dog is called “dog”, but word not applied to other dogs, almost like a name)
  • over extension: words used too broadly (child calls every man “Daddy”, or every animal is “doggy”)
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9
Q

Telegraphic speech

A
  • 18-36 mnths
  • two word combos that communicate only the essential words (IE: “want cupcake”)
  • follows rule of grammar despite dropping other functional words
  • understanding of syntax outweighs production of syntax
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10
Q

Overregulation

A
  • grammatical mistakes made when children apply grammatical rules too stringently
  • understand grammatical rules, but not the exceptions
  • IE: “I have two foots” or “I runned across the field”
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11
Q

30 million word catastrophe

A
  • +30 million difference in words heard btwn children in professional households vs low income households
  • shows that some children are at a disadvantage before starting school
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12
Q

Achievement gap

A
  • persistent disparity on educational outcomes due to SES, race/ethnicity, or gender
  • accumulates
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13
Q

Summer Learning loss

A
  • children’s language skills improve less during summer than during the school year
  • disproportionally affects children in low SES
  • accumulates over time
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14
Q

Simultaneous

A
  • children hears two languages from birth and acquires them at the same time
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15
Q

Sequential

A
  • child hears only one lang for the first few years
  • later exposed to another lang
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16
Q

Language differentiation

A
  • figuring out that you are hearing two diff languages rather than one combined lang
17
Q

Bilingualism’s Effects on Language Development

A
  • phoneme discrimination and canonical babbling on same schedule
  • smaller vocab in each language
  • languages w/ similar syntax do not cause any delay, languages w/ very diff syntax may result in a delay
18
Q

Immersion approach/ESL approach

A
  • all instruction occurs in majority approach
  • one language becomes more dominant
  • tend to fall behind bc they dont have the ability to acquire the knowledge
19
Q

Bilingualism

A
  • instruction initially in native lang
  • shifts to second lang as proficiency increases
  • reduces likelihood of child falling behind
20
Q

Dual language learning

A
  • two-way immersion
  • children are taught and develop skills in two lang
  • argued as developing bilingualism
21
Q

Executive functioning of bilingualism

A
  • greater cog flexibility - use of one language activates the other language, which has to be inhibited
  • more robust working mem
  • stronger selective attention
  • likely to do better in school
22
Q

Cognitive reserve of bilingualism

A
  • mind’s resistance to brain deterioration/damage
  • prevention of AZ
23
Q

Adult second language acquisition

A
  • earlier age of exposure is better
  • poor performance regardless of age of exposure or number of years using language
24
Q

What is the second lang education like in U.S. schools?

A
  • begins after 12 - end of the sensitive period
  • avg student spends less than 2 years studying second language