Child Development 131 (3):

Language and learning

Spring 2002

Dr. Weissman

 

Syllabus

 

Instructor:

Dr. Michelle D. Weissman

Email: weissmanmd@csus.edu

Phone: 278-4831

Office: Brighton Hall 131

Office Hours: T 9:00-10:00, Th 12-12:45 and 4:15-5:00 or by appointment

Class Meetings:

Tuesdays and Thursdays, 3:00 - 4:15 pm

Eureka Hall 105

 

 

 

Course Description:

An investigation of language development, its relationship to children’s cognitive and social development, and to children’s learning in school, linguistic and communicative competence, second-language acquisition and principles underlying effective instruction for all children. Emphasis will be on the interactive role of cognition, perception, and child language.

 

Course Objectives:

In this course you will:

1) study systems and structures of language that describe how languages work

2) identify factors that influence language acquisition and language use

3) examine theories of first and second language acquisition

4) consider the relationship between linguistic development and cognitive, social, and academic development

5) observe, record, and analyze children’s language

6) engage in collaborative activities to foster analysis, evaluation, problem solving, discussion and debate to enhance your understanding of language development.

 

 

 

Required Text:

Owens, R. E. (2001). Language Development (5th edition). Allyn & Bacon: Needham Heights, MA.

The instructor may place several (required and/or optional) supplementary readings on reserve at the Library.

Assigned readings should be completed before the scheduled class.

   

 

Requirements:

 

Class Participation: (40 points total)

Students are expected to read all assignments prior to class and to attend class on time, each class day.  In addition, students are encouraged to ask questions and participate in class discussions. We will occasionally break into small groups for discussion of the course topics. The purpose of these meetings is to provide you with an opportunity to work closely with the course material, with the benefit of discussion with your fellow students. These meetings will be guided by a set of questions provided by the instructor. Each group will be expected to turn-in their responses to the group questions. One obvious note: class participation requires that you physically attend class! Students who do not attend class, do not complete assigned readings, and/or do not contribute to small group and whole class discussions will not be eligible to receive full points for this course requirement. There will be no make-up options for missed in-class activities.

 

Exams: (200 points total)

Two exams, 100-points each. Each exam will cover 1/2 of the course content (non-cumulative), and will contain questions drawn from readings, lectures, and discussions. Exams may consist of a variety of question types including multiple choice, short answer, and short essay questions. No make-up exams will be administered. Anyone who misses Exam 1 (with a prior instructor approved excuse) will need to take a cumulative final exam during the scheduled second exam date. (Valid excuses for missing an exam include family illness, family emergency, and official University business. All of these require documentation to be valid.)

 

Exam 1 Study Guide

Exam 2 Study Guide

 


Projects: (140 points total)

Two research projects, and written reports based on these, are required. Detailed descriptions of these projects will be provided on separate handouts. Below is an overview of the assignments:

 

1) Analysis of a child’s language (100 points). You will select a child aged 3-11-years to participate in your study. This will include obtaining parent permission letter to indicate their informed consent. You will obtain a language sample of at least 30 minutes, and then transcribe and analyze the child’s language in terms of structure and function. This transcript will be obtained and transcribed at the beginning of the semester and will be used throughout the semester as a means for interpreting and applying the course material. Throughout the semester, the instructor will provide handouts of mini-assignments that will require the use of your transcript. Assignments will be turned-in periodically for feedback, but you will keep a full portfolio (notebook), which will include your transcript and short papers with your responses to each of the mini-assignments. The final piece of the portfolio will be a paper summarizing your findings. The complete portfolio will be due during finals week.

 

Project 1 Handouts:
General Guidelines for Collection of Sample and Transcription
Conversation Topics and Guidelines
Part 2 handout: Descriptives, Phonemes, Word Use
CDI: Word Use Checklist
CDI Results (part 3)
Part 4 handout: MLU calculations
Final handout: Final Paper and Portfolio

 

 

 

2) Review of a published research article on language development (40 points). You will conduct a literature search in order to find one empirical article about either 1) second language acquisition (including sign language) or 2) diverse language learning (including dialects and language acquisition for children with disabilities). All articles must be approved by the instructor. You will read and evaluate the selected article and write a 3-5-page paper describing your analysis as well as relate it to material presented in the course text.

You may earn up to 6 points of extra credit for presenting your finding to the class. See Timetable below for the schedule of presenters.

 

 

 

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Grading Overview:

 

Assignment

Possible Points

Approximate Percent of Final Grade

Participation

  40

  11%

Exam 1

 100

  26%

Exam 2

 100

  26%

Child Language Project

 100

  26%

Research Article Analysis

  40

  11%

Total

380

100%

 

Final grades will be assigned based on the standard grading scale:

A = 90% and above, B = 80-89%, C = 70-79%, D = 60-69%

 

 

No Late Assignments: As a general rule, I do not accept late assignments; however, arrangements may be made under special circumstances --these must be discussed with the instructor in advance of the scheduled due date and there will be a penalty for each day that the assignment is late (2% of total points).

 

 

Incompletes: The instructor will avoid assigning incomplete grades in this course, as far as possible. Students who suspect that they may not be able to complete the course requirements should discuss the matter with the instructor as soon as possible.

 

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Course Calendar for Child Development 131 (3)

Wk

Date

Readings

Topic

Assignment Due Dates

and Presentation Schedule

1

T    29 Jan

 

Course Description

 

 

Th  31 Feb

Ch 1: pp. 1-16

Introduction

Parts of Speech handout

Discuss Project 1

2

T     5 Feb

Ch 1: pp. 17-22

Syntax & Morphology

 

 

Th   7 Feb

Ch 1: pp. 17-22

Syntax & Morphology

 

3

T   12 Feb

NO CLASS - Research Day – obtain child language sample

 

Th 14 Feb

Ch 1: pp. 22-27

Semantics & Pragmatics

 

4

T   19 Feb

Ch 1: pp. 21-29

Phonology

Phonetic transcription handout

Phonetic transcription answer key

 

 

Th 21 Feb

Ch 3

Child Development Review

Responses to Group Questions

Discuss Project 2

5

T   26 Feb

Ch 2: pp. 31-48

Language Development Models

bring sample transcript to class

 

Th 28 Feb

NO CLASS – Research Day – obtain article for Project 2

6

T     5 Mar

Ch 2: pp. 31-48

Language Development Models

turn in transcript

 

Th   7 Mar

Ch 2: pp. 48-65

Language Development Models

 

7

T   12 Mar

Ch 2: pp. 48-65

Language Development Models

 

 

Th 14 Mar

Ch 4: pp. 117-127

Models of Linguistic Processing

Project 2 article due

Exam 1 Study Guide

8

T   19 Mar

 

Exam 1 Review

 

 

Th 21 Mar

 

Exam 1

Exam 1

Turn in responses to Project 1, Part 2 handout (including a copy of CDI words)

9

T   26 Mar

NO CLASS – SPRING BREAK

 

Th 28 Mar

NO CLASS – SPRING BREAK

10

T     2 Apr

Ch 5: pp. 129-150

Cognitive Bases of Language

 

Th   4 Apr

 

AERA*

NO CLASS!

11

T      9 Apr

Ch 5: pp. 151-155

Perceptual Bases of Language

 

 

Th  11 Apr

Ch 7: pp. 197-230

Language-Learning Strategies

Exam 1 revisions due

Revision Guidelines

12

T    16 Apr

Ch 7: pp. 230-235

Language-Learning Strategies

 

 

Th 18 Apr

Ch 10: pp. 305-332

Preschool Development of Language

 

13

T   23 Apr

Ch 10: pp. 332-347

Preschool Development of Language

Project 2 paper due

 

Th 25 Apr

Ch 8: pp. 237-250

First Language Acquisition

Bring MLU calculations to class (also bring your transcript that shows your work.)

14

T   30 Apr

Ch 8: pp. 250-273

First Language Acquisition

Miscellaneous:

Debbie K. & Cathy R.

Francesca F.

Frances M.

 

Th   2 May

Ch 9: pp. 275-292

Preschool Pragmatic Development

Deafness:

Julia N.

Rene L.

Jessica M.

15

T     7 May

Ch 9: pp. 292-303

Preschool Semantic Development

Responses to Group Questions on Pragmatic and Semantic Development

 

Miscellaneous:

Julie S.

 

Th   9 May

Ch 13

Bilingualism

Bilingualism:

Katherine M.

Citlalin DLR

Sarah W.

16

T   14 May

 

Wrap-up and Exam 2 Review

Exam 2 Study Guide

2nd Language Acquisition:

Kate A.

Jennifer F.

Alyssa C.

Andrea D.

Stephanie G

Alejandra G

 

Th 16 May

 

Exam 2

Exam 2

17

T   21 May

Finals Week

No Class Meeting

Child Language Portfolio Due in my office by 4 p.m.

 

*Note: I will be at the AERA conference for part of Week 10, and therefore, we will only meet one day this week. As soon as I know my travel dates, I will tell you whether we meet on April 2nd OR April 4th.

 

*   *   *

Please note: I wish to fully include persons with disabilities in this course. Please let me know if you need any special accommodations in the curriculum, instruction, or assessments of this course to enable you to fully participate. I will try to maintain the confidentiality of the information you share with me.

Send problems, comments or suggestions about this site to: weissmanmd@csus.edu

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