Wednesday, 13 November 2013

Child Language Theorists research

Chomsky
Noam Chomsky believes that children are born with an inherited ability to learn any human language so it is innate.   Chomsky believes that every child has a ‘language acquisition device’ (LAD) which encodes the major assumptions of a language and its grammatical structures into the child’s brain. Children then only need to learn new vocabulary and apply the syntactic structures from the LAD to form sentences. Chomsky points out that a child could not possibly learn a language through imitation alone because the language spoken around them is highly irregular – adult’s speech is often broken up and even sometimes ungrammatical. Chomsky’s theory applies to all languages as they all contain nouns, verbs, consonants and vowels. All children, regardless of their intellectual ability, become fluent in their native language within five or six years.

Evidence to support Chomsky’s theory


-Children learning to speak never make grammatical errors such as getting their subjects, verbs and objects in the wrong order.
-If an adult deliberately said a grammatically incorrect sentence, the child would notice.
-Children often say things that are ungrammatical such as ‘mama ball’, which they cannot have learnt passively.
-Mistakes such as ‘I drawed’ instead of ‘I drew’ show they are not learning through imitation alone.
-Chomsky used the sentence ‘colourless green ideas sleep furiously’, which is grammatical although it doesn’t make sense, to prove his theory: he said it shows that sentences can be grammatical without having any meaning, that we can tell the difference between a grammatical and an ungrammatical sentence without ever having heard the sentence before, and that we can produce and understand brand new sentences that no one has ever said before.

Evidence against Chomsky’s theory

-Critics of Chomsky’s theory say that although it is clear that children don’t learn language through imitation alone, this does not prove that they must have an LAD – language learning could solely be through general learning and understanding abilities and interactions with other people.

Skinner- operant conditioning
 Skinner bases his theory of children acquiring language thrugh behaviourism. Skinner states that all behaviour is conditined e.g. punished or rewarded until it becomes natural and automatic. (postive reinforcement). Babies imitate their parents/carers and are either lectured or praised according to their accuracy. This is Skinner going against Chomsky, as he believe biology plays almost no part in the way children learn language.

Some skinner quotes- ''Give me a child and I'll shape him into anything.''
''The way positive reinforcement is carried out is more important than the amount.''

Piaget
According to Piaget, children are born with a very basic mental structure (genetically inherited and evolved) on which all subsequent learning and knowledge is based.
It is concerned with children, rather than all learners.
It focuses on development, rather than learning per se, so it does not address learning of information or specific behaviors.
-It proposes discrete stages of development, marked by qualitative differences, rather than a gradual increase in number and complexity of behaviors, concepts, ideas, etc.

Lenneburg
Eric Lenneburg (1962) argued against Skinner's theory, in that children who are unable to speak due to illness are able to gain a normal comprehension of language without the ability to imitate adults, or by having their utterances reinforced.
Lenneberg formed the Critical Period Hypothesis theory which contends that language is innate but has to be attained before the age of puberty or else the ability to learn language.
Studies such as, linguistically isolated children (a.k.a. feral children) and genie support Lenneberg's theory of the critical period because they are unable to fully acquire language. The Critical Period Hypothesis, the origins of which date back to  Lenneberg considered to be the “father” of such hypothesis. According to the Critical Period Hypothesis, there is an age related point on which, current researchers diverge, but it is usually within the puberty period, beyond which it becomes difficult or impossible to attain a native speaking like competence. Lenneberg (1967) sees the critical period starting at the age of 2 and ending around puberty, a period, which coincides with the brain lateralisation process, which is the specialisation of the dominant hemisphere of the brain language functions. Lenneberg cited a wide evidence of changes in the brain taking place during this period. However, his claim was at a later stage criticised by other researchers, who undertook several studies and reinterpreted the relevant data concluding that the process is already complete before puberty.


 

Wednesday, 2 October 2013

Child transcript

Children arguing transcript


Girl:   yyes
Boy:    noo
Girl:     if I say yes
Boy:    I said no
Girl:     if I say yyy (2) es I say yes (1) if I say no then no
Boy:    nooooooo
Girl:     I (1) said (1) no
Boy:    I said noo first
Girl:     I said no first
Boy:    nuuh I said no first
Girl:     I said no first
Boy:    [leans forward towards girl] be quiet
Girl:     you be quiet
Boy:    [points to girl] now you be quiet nowww
Girl:     [points to herself then boy] you be quiet (2) im four you not four
Boy:    yeah am I four you (2) much young
Girl:     you (1) [points to boy] are not four (1) I am four [points to herself]
Boy:    no you (1) dis-re-specting
Girl:     you are bad [points to boy]
Boy:    no (1) you are bad [points at girl]
Girl:     [points at boy] imma tell your mum (1) you will go home
Boy:    [lightly pushes girl] go

Girl:     [walks away] 


Analysis

The conversation I transcribed was between two four year olds (a boy and a girl) arguing in a house about who said no first and who is older. The two infants are friends through there mums ‘’ imma tell your mum you will go home’’ this indicates that their parents are friends.          
            They start the conversation by shouting ‘yes’ and ‘no’ by simultaneously shouting simple adverbs to each other it seems  they are in the telegraphic stage, and that they can’t form a flowing discourse, neither of them initiate the conversation. For example ‘I said no first’ this is said three times during the conversation, they just switch it too and from each other. However by the age of 3 and definitely four they should be in the post telegraphic stage. Simple sentences are widely used ‘’you be quiet’’ this is a sign of earlier skills of speech normally used by the age of 2. Compound sentences are also used ‘’you are not four I am four’’ by using more than just the simple sentence it shows they have developed their sentence structure skills and are more advanced, however it wasn’t combined with a coordinating conjunction which indicates a child is in the post telegraphic stage. Although some of the lexis they use is a lot more progressed by not being stuck in one tense, as children in the telegraphic stage talk about the present tense ‘’you will go home’’  this  shows she understands tenses when speaking she doesn’t just say ‘’you go home’’ which a child stuck in the telegraphic stage would say.
 

 



Wednesday, 25 September 2013

Children speaking

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4GjPlR6BAE  say peanut butter (little boy)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sL3vqlHabck  phone convo between a little girl and little boy

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vD4NDBceVD0 austrian kids speaking english   

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AuOpdxrSB8Y baby answers questions and makes animal noises

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d2TQB33dAlU i dont want to go to school (on phone to her dad)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q1t6rRgmuGQ ate halloween sweets

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-cUTV56Yh0 boy and girl arguing