Explain the significance of child-directed speech and the language development theories it supports and refutes Child-directed speech aims to attract and hold the baby’s attention‚ help the process of breaking down language into understandable chunks and make the conversation more predictable by keeping the conversation in the here and now and referring to things that the baby can see. Child-directed speech has a variety of features examples of these features are: higher pitch‚ repeated sentence
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The Basic Reading Skills in English Language of Grade VI: A Plan for Skills Development In partial fulfillment of the Requirement in English 122- Language Research December 20‚ 2013 I- INTRODUCTION A. Background of the Study Schools have committed a wide array of resources to build the early literacy skills that are essential to academic success for students. Ideally‚ a student should have mastered basic reading skills‚ such as decoding and word recognition‚ by the end of
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...... .. 3 Main body 1. Language acquisition . . ....... 4 2. The stages of language acquisition .... ...... .. 5 2.1. The prelinguistic stage . ......... ........... 7 2.2. Babbling ........ ........... 7 2.3. One-word utterances .. .... ........... 9 2.4. Two-word utterances .............. .. .... 10 2.5. Telegraphic speech ........ ... 13 2.6. Language learning during the pre-school period .. 16
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1. Differences between First Language and Second Language | First Language | Second Language | Definition | any language other than English that a child was exposed to during early development and continues to be exposed to in the home or community | any language learned after the first language or mother tongue | Basis for learning | universal grammar alone | knowledge of the first language also serves as a basis for learning the second language | Learning Process | children spend
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investigated in psycholinguistics •Language Comprehension •Language Production •Language Acquisition Psycholinguistics is a branch of cognitive science What will be covered in this class? • How do we produce and recognize speech? • How do we perceive words‚ letters‚ and sentences? • How do we learn and recall information from texts? • How can we improve texts to make them easier to understand? • How does the brain function to process language? • What are the causes and effects
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OVERVIEW: 1. Child language development: stages 2. FLA Theories: Skinner‚ Piaget vs. Chomsky. 3. Roger Brown & Morpheme Order 4. Child-Directed Speech (motherese); CHILDES 5. Gordon Wells & The Bristol Project ============================================================== Summary of Theories of First Language Acquisition Three broad theories of L1 acquisition:
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AO1 – Patterns of Development This coursework will describe how children develop according to milestones from birth to eight years old. Activity 1 Emily is 17 years old and lives on the outskirts of Woking. She is currently living with her mum and attends St. John the Baptist Sixth Form College in Old Woking. Emily is a conscientious and hard working individual and her qualifications clearly support this. Having achieved excellent grades at GCSE and AS level‚ Emily is eager to continue with
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theory on the cycle of life in 1950. He and his wife Joan had worked together on “The Life Cycle Completed” in order to describe the eight stages of development. After Erikson’s passing‚ his wife added a ninth stage in the most recent version of the book. Within this book‚ the nine stages are described in detail as they relate to human psychosocial development. The original eight stages and psychosocial orientations that are acquired with each stage are as follows‚ infancy: basic trust vs. basic mistrust
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Experiment 2 The Addition of Vectors In this experiment a force table is used experimentally to determine the magnitude and direction of a fourth force that is necessary to effect static equilibrium when three known forces act on a light ring. The reliability of the data is investigated‚ and the experimental values are compared to theoretical values. Theory According to Newton ’s First Law of Motion‚ a particle is considered to be in static equilibrium when the vector sum of
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society in general for centuries. ‘There are many experts that share and dispute the answers to these questions‚ but there are two in particular that have contributed greatly in finding explanations’ (Crux‚ 2006); Sigmund Freud and Burrhus Frederick Skinner. This essay will compare Freud’s and Skinner’s approach towards human behaviour‚ highlighting the main ideas and focus of their theories and subsequently coming to an informative decision as to who provides the better approach. This is achieved by
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