Grammatical Development 2

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How Children Acquire Language
Advertisements

Developmental Sequences in Second Language Learning Presenters: Jacqueline dos Anjos, Hanna Heseker, Dana Meyer.
Yes/No Questions By Yung-Chen Chung. What is a Yes/No question? AAAA Yes/No question wants either “yes” or “no” as an answer.
Pasco-Hernando Community College Tutorial Series.
Language Acqisition - From Womb to School. Content Pre/Postnatal Language Development The First Three Years The Pre-School Years The School Years.
Learner Language What is learner language?
PSY 369: Psycholinguistics Language Acquisition: Morphology.
Baby Talk How Infants Become Children. Questions about Language Acquisition Is language innate? If it is, what skills allow children to learn language?
Semantic Development Acquisition of words and their meanings
Form Classes Ed McCorduck English 402—Grammar SUNY Cortland
Language Chapter 9. Language A form of communication based on symbols Spoken, written, or signed Displacement quality Infinite generativity.
© Oxford University Press 2008 Language Acquisition DEVELOPING LANGUAGE: Language Acquisition.
Unit 3 Seminar.  "Brown's Stages" were identified by Roger Brown and described in his classic book (Brown,1973). The stages provide a framework.
Assisting children’s grammar development PRIMARY INNOVATIONS Module 2 Topic 1 Slide number 1.
© Child language acquisition To what extent do children acquire language by actively working out its rules?
Grammatical tenses Past tense. Form: Simple Past I walked You walked He/she/it walked We/you/they walked So: verb + ed.
First Language Acquisition Chapter 14
Intellectual Development 3 year olds Thinking ability matures Able to solve simple problems kljj.
:Objectives  Know the language system a child of the age 5 acquire.  List the issues that are related to 1L acquisition.  Explain the theories that.
Fita Ariyana Rombel 7 (Thursday 9 am).
Applied Linguistics First Language Acquisition.
 Syntactic Knowledge ECSE 500 Spring February 26  Language learning activities –  Brittany, Mary, Brooke, and Michelle  Morphology language.
SYNTACTIC DEVELOPMENT ECSE 500 CLASS SESSION 6. REVIEW PHONOLOGY SEMANTICS MORPHOLOGY TODAY - SYNTAX.
Language Development. Four Components of Language Phonology sounds Semantics meanings of words Grammar arrangements of words into sentences Pragmatics.
First language Acquisition Chapter 14 Ms. Abrar Mujaddidi.
CHILD LANGUAGE Research and further reading. Semantic Roles Roger Brown (1973) Looks at the 2 word stage ( months) and categorises utterances into.
1 Paradigmas Linguisticos Semester II Child language learning.
How people learn their first language Session 2. Developmental sequences Morphemes Negation Questions.
REQUIREMENTS: A child must interact with other language users. A child must have the physical ability to send and receive information. P149.
1 U210B Chapter 1: ENGLISH AS A FIRST LANGUAGE Presentation: Dr. Faisal Al-Qahtani.
King Faisal University جامعة الملك فيصل Deanship of E-Learning and Distance Education عمادة التعلم الإلكتروني والتعليم عن بعد [ ] 1 King Faisal University.
English Grammar Lecture 3: Form Classes
The development of speech production
Theories of Language Acquisition
Child Syntax and Morphology
Tag-Questions or Question Tags
Second Language Acquisition & English Teaching
Second Language Acquisition
FIRST AND SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION/ LEARNING
Child language learning
Chapter 1 Language learning in early childhood
The nativist theory Noam Chomsky (1928—).
Piaget’s four stages of cognitive development
PAST SIMPLE TENSE TO BE + PAST SIMPLE TENSE
2nd Language Learning Chapter 2 Lecture 4.
Part Two: Writing Effective Sentences
Paradigmas Linguisticos Semester II
Telegraphic speech: two- and three-word utterances
Writing about Grammatical Development
Part Two: Writing Effective Sentences
Today’s class Listening, Speaking, TEE Review Learning theories
Improving Written Communication: “To Do” Verb Phrase Problems
Verbs.
THE NATURE of LEARNER LANGUAGE
Language AP Psychology.
Lecture 8: Verb Positions
Learner Language What is learner language?
Grammatical Development 1
The Nature of Learner Language
The Nature of Learner Language (Chapter 2 Rod Ellis, 1997) Page 15
The Basics of Sentence Structure
Verbs and Verb Phrases Ed McCorduck English 402--Grammar SUNY Cortland
Child Language Acquisition
The Nature Of Learner Language
Roger Brown’s (1973) First Language Development Study and MLU
STAGES OF FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION
Form Classes Ed McCorduck English 402—Grammar SUNY Cortland
Stages of Language Development.
TECHNICAL REPORTS WRITING
Psychology Chapter 8 Section 5: Language.
Presentation transcript:

Grammatical Development 2 Lecture Five Grammatical Development 2

Grammatical development 2 … This lecture will consider the acquisition of grammatical rules in more depth. We will consider: Inflections Questions Negatives

Acquisition of inflections … Predictable patterns: revealed by research in the acquisition of inflections. Grammatical function words: also seem to be acquired in a predictable order.

Brown (1973) … Study: 20 – 36 month olds exhibited the sequence shown below: -ing plural –s possessive –s ‘the’, ‘a’ past tense –ed third person singular verb ending –s auxiliary ‘be’

Cruttenden (1979) … Memorize words individually. No regard for rules. Awareness of general principles governing inflections. OVERGENERALIZATION Correct inflections are used, including irregular forms.

Understanding of grammatical rules … Researchers: How do children produce grammatically accurate constructions so early in their development? Rules?? Imitation??

Berko (1958) … ‘Wug’ ‘This is a Wug’ ‘Now there is another one; there are two of them’ Complete the sentence: ‘There are two …’

Berko (1958) … 3-4 years old: ‘wugs’ Grammatical rule for plural ‘s’ was clearly being applied.

Overgeneralization … 2 ½ - 5 years: grammatical errors show an awareness of rules. They ‘overgeneralize/overregularize’, trying to make the language more consistent than it is: sheeps wented mouses

Be careful … Although children apply grammatical rules in this way, they are not conscious that they have acquired them and would not be able to explain them = NO METALINGUISTIC AWARENESS

? Questions … Asking questions involves complex constructions. Research: suggests they are three stages involved in acquiring this skill …

Questions … Two-word stage: questions rely on rising intonation only. Second year: question words acquired: first ‘what’ and ‘where’, then ‘why’, ‘who’ and ‘how’= ‘Where daddy gone?’ Third year: begin to use auxiliary verbs and inversion…

Questions … Therefore: ‘Joe is here’ becomes ‘Is Joe here?’ However: questions involving –wh words are not always correctly inverted: ‘Why Joe isn’t here?’

Negation … NO! It also appears that the accurate expression of negative (stereotypically characterised by the ‘terrible twos’) occurs in three stages …

Negation … Single dependence on the words ‘no’ and ‘not’ used independently or in front of expressions: ‘no want’ and ‘no go bed’. Third year: ‘don’t’ and ‘can’t’ appear. Begin to appear after the subject and before the verb of the sentence: ‘I don’t want it’ and ‘Sammy can’t play’

Negation … 3. More negative forms are acquired: ‘didn’t’ and ‘isn’t’. Negative constructions are not generally more accurate.

Vocabulary test … OVERGENERALIZATION IRREGULAR FORMS METALINGUISTIC AWARENESS