Language
and Learning Spring 2002 Dr. Weissman
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Group Responses to Owens’ Questions on Child Development(as
related to language) 1. The diverse development of children exhibits
several patterns. What are these patterns, and what do they mean? a. Developmental predictability. There's an orderly sequence of development. For example, a child must learn to utter sounds before she can put them together into words. (babble -> words -> sentences) b.
Developmental Milestones. There are approximate ages that
all normally developing children reach certain skills or abilities. E.g.
Most babies can sit up at 4-6 months, and by their first birthday, most
children speak their first words. c.
Developmental Opportunities. A child needs experience and
practice to build on their level of maturity and what they've learned,
such as grasping or bouncing a ball. d. Developmental Phases or Periods. Children develop in phases or periods. These are stages in which certain areas of development are
emphasized. During these developmental phases, good nutrition is very
important in order to nurture their development. e. Individual Differences. Although there are approximate ages in which phases normally occur, actual ages will vary in development. If one child learns to walk at 12 months and another does so at 14 months, they are both normal. Besides individual differences, some other differences that may affect development are socio-economic status, emotional and
sphysical health, and prenatal care. 2.
Explain briefly the four processes in speech production?
all interrelated: a.
Physical development – growth and motor control
The physical development consists of the
proximodistal progression of a child; basically the child develops from
the center out. ·
Gross to fine motor
control ·
4-5 à
adolescence b.
Cognitive development – intellectual growth ·
Organize store and
retrieve information for problem solving and generalization. ·
memory c.
Socioemotional – perception of self and others ·
The
socio-emotional process involves a child becoming less egocentric and more
social. ·
Learn roles, rules,
and customs of society d.
Communicative development ·
The communicative development
consists of four processes of speech production: respiration, phonation,
resonation, and articulation. ·
Speech requires
motor control and neuromuscular control. Body is sound source. ·
Respiration, vocal
folds, larynx à
phonation Socioemotional, cognitive, physical development aid in communicative development and language learning. 3.
Some of the reflexive behaviors the newborn exhibits are related to
oral movement. Describe these oral reflexes and when they disappear.
4.
Babbling and reduplicated babbling differ considerably. Describe
each form of behavior. Babbling
is defined as having single-syllable units of consonant-vowel or
vowel-consonant construction. Infant begin babbling at 4-months. It’s
often and imitation of what they here. Infants produce babbling noise
increasingly, and more complex. Even infants who have hearing impairments
babble also . Babbling continues until school age for hearing-impaired
infants, although the babbling is slightly different. During babbling
stage, infants experiment with sounds. The sounds produced are sometimes
not of his or her native language. Babbling however is not reinforced by
parents. Reduplicated
babbling occurs at 6-7 months when children are still producing
single-syllable sounds. Reduplicated babbling is a long string of the same
single-syllable sound. Example: ma-ma-ma-ma. Hearing capability is very
important in this brief stage of reduplicated babbling. It’s often
connected to what infants are holding or seeing, instead of just random
babbling. 5.
What are the major differences between two-, three, - four, - and
five- year- olds, with regards to speech? Two-year
olds-
Three Year olds
Four
Year olds
Five
year olds
6.
What generalizations can we make about preschoolers’ development
of speech sounds? -
by 3 yrs. old uses an expressive vocabulary of 900 to 1,000 words
and employs in 12,000
individual words per day -
mastered vowel sounds and consonants /p/, /m/, /n/, /w/, /b/, /k/,
/g/, & /d/ -
sentences follow SVO format -
uses toys in imaginative ways & exhibits much make-believe play
often accompanied by sounds & words as he/she explains his/her
actions, makes environmental noises.
Or takes various roles. -
overgeneralize -ed ending
to irregular past-tense verbs *ex: goed or eated *difficulty w/ auxiliary verbs
& verb to be -
at 4 yrs. old ask lots of questions & increase memory/recall -
begin sentences with and
or use and to produce long
run-or sentences that tell a story -
use regular & irregular past-tense verbs -
at 5 yrs. old temporal notions help child understand explanations
of cause & effect & comprehension of temporal terms such as before
& after -
uses correct regular & irregular past tenses trouble w/ verb to
be -
use expressive vocabulary -
acquire in 80% of syntactic structures he/she will use as an adult -
develops many
self-help skills 7.
Describe the overall changes that occur in the behavior of
school-aged children. ·
Height and weight ·
Mental abilities,
sensory input, abstract thought ·
Same sex relations
becoming very important this is termed “gang relations” ·
Manipulation –
influence others through language ·
Refine
conversational skill to become better communication ·
Vocabulary grows to
reflect systematic development of word formation rules ·
Development of fine
and gross motor skills allow better manipulation of objects ·
Better coordination
and balance – bike, throw ball ·
Enjoy sports, motor
skills, increased self esteem, and increased independence ·
Inferred reality,
centration, transform thought, reversible mental operation 8.
Explain these semantic skills:
divergent and convergent production; figurative language. Divergent
production-
the process of listing ideas, words, phrases, sentences on an open
ended topic. Divergent
production is a process for creative thinking and language, brainstorming. ie:
The ocean- color, what is in it, where it is, what does it look
like, feel like, and texture. Congruent
production-
selecting the unique word rule that fits a specific response,
closed ended question. ie:
What word can be in the place of John? John
went to the store. A.
Him B.
Them C.
I D.
He Figurative
language-
allows the child to use abstract thoughts not stated in a literal
meaning. Uses idiom, similes,
metaphors and proverbs. ie: Her smile is as bright as the sunshine.
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