Unit 14 Support Children’s Speech‚ Language and Communication Unit Code: T/600/9789 1.1 There are many speech‚ language and communication needs of children. Speech refers to saying sounds accurately and in the right places in words; the sounds people use to communicate words; speaking fluently‚ without hesitation or prolonging or repeating words and sounds and speaking with a clear voice‚ using pitch‚ volume and intonation to support meaning. Language refers to speaking and understanding
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Support children’s speech‚ language and communication Speech is the communication or expression of thoughts in spoken words. The exchange of spoken words is a conversation and there are 8 different parts of speech. Noun- names a person‚ place‚ or thing Pronoun- takes the place of a noun Verb- identifies action or state of being Adjective- modifies a noun Adverb- modifies a verb‚ adjective‚ or other adverb Preposition- shows a relationship between a noun (or pronoun) and other words in a sentence
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1.2 Explain how speech‚ language and communication skills support children’s learning‚ emotions‚ behaviour and socialisation Speech‚ Language and Communication skills can support a child’s learning‚ emotions‚ behaviour and socialisation massively‚ and these are just a few examples. Language Language can support learning Speech‚ Language and Communication skills in many ways and one of these ways that they can do this is by using and making different sounds and symbols‚ spoke as well as signed
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EMPY 5 1.1 Explain each of the terms: speech‚ language‚ communication‚ speech ‚ language and communication needs. Speech ‚ language and communication are closely tied to other areas of development‚ this learning outcome requires you to understand and be able to explain links between speech and development and the likely impact of any difficulties that children may have in acquiring speech‚ communication and language. Some children may not be able to understand the words being spoken to them
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Language and Literacy Development in Preschool Children Long before a child begins to speak‚ he is already communicating with the world around him. From a very young age‚ a baby knows that a cry will draw a parent’s attention and that holding out his arms means “pick me up". And long before a child learns to read and write‚ he has already embarked on the path to literacy. Playing with a book‚ pointing to a sign or scribbling on a piece of paper – all of these are signs of emergent literacy
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Language can mean many different things; it can be seen and heard‚ and it can be diverse and standard It is a cognitive phenomenon that follows a set of rules and tells our brains how to speak grammatically (Clark‚ as cited in Gee & Hayes‚ 2011‚ p. 6). Language is a set social conventions that is shared amongst a group of people (Duranti‚ as cited in Gee & Hayes‚ 2011 p.6)‚ and can also be material in the form of speech‚ audio recordings and writings (Gee & Hayes‚ 2011‚ p. 6). However‚ it is more
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Unit 068 – Support Children’s speech‚ Language and Communication 1.1 SPEECH Is the vocalised sounds made by a human of their learned language‚ to communicate to others. LANGUAGE can be spoken‚ written or signed with hand communication skills. Each different language uses their own set of intricate rules which one must follow to make or read the appropriate sound and therefore for the words to make sense. The amount of sounds and letter/symbols will vary depending on the language. English has over
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EYMP5 -1.2 Explain how speech‚ language and communication skills support each of the following areas in children`s development: * learning * emotional * behaviour * social Communication and being able to communicate is the foundation for many other areas of children`s development. Children need to be able to use and understand speech and language in order to learn. For example‚ being able to ask‚ `What`s that?` or‚ `How do I do this?` and being able to understand the reply is
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BILINGUAL PROGRAM: CHILDREN LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT ABSTRACT This paper discussed on bilingual program that become one of the reasons parents choose schools for their children and its effect on children language development. As the impact of globalization English become a necessity for everyone in exploring and finding new things across the globe. Educational institutions see this as an opportunity to introduce bilingual program as a respond to the demand of society. Keywords: Bilingualism
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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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