Educ 101 Reviewer
Educ 101 Reviewer
Educ 101 Reviewer
Objectives
1. Explain the natural history of language development
2. Describe bilingual development
3. Classify the emergent and early literacy particularly reading development and
performance
4. Name the factors affecting language development
5. Differentiate exceptional language development
The give and take of conversation is one of the early training infant’s
acquire in the language development. This is called “pseudodialogues." Adult
maintains the flow of conversation. Example, Oooglie ooogilie googlie googlie. By
the time an infant reach one year, he becomes skilled in nonverbal
communication. Another early training device is using protodeclaratives. An infant
uses gestures to make some sort of statement about an object. Another training
device is protoimperatives. Gestures that an infant or a young child may use to
get someone to do something he or she wants. Children can make statements
about things and get other people to do things for them.
II. Bilingual Language Development
It has been established that bilingualism where children learn two
languages simultaneously, puts children to an advantage in terms of language
proficiency. It affords advanced cognitive skills, flexibility of thought and greater
acceptance of peers from other cultural backgrounds (Bec, Helen and Denise
Boyd, 2002. Lifespan Development, 3rd edition).
Cognitive Advantages of Bilingualism
1. Bilingualism does not impact on early language milestone like babbling.
2. In bilingual homes, infants readily discriminate between the two languages
phonologically and grammatically.
3. Learning a grammatical device as using s to denote plurals in one language
facilitate learning corresponding devices in the other language.
4. Bilingualism is associated with an advantage in metalinguistic ability, or
capacity to think about language among preschool and school age children.
5. Most bilingual children manifest greater ability than monolingual children
when it comes to focusing attention on languages tasks.
Cognitive Disadvantages of Bilingualism
1. Limited vocabulary. Infants in bilingual homes have expressive vocabularies
that are as large as those of the monolingual, but the words they know are
divided between two languages resulting into a more limited vocabulary which
continues into the school years.
2. Think more slowly in the language in which they have the lesser fluency.
Bilingual children are fluent in both languages and thus, encounter fewer
problems, but they do not attain equal fluency. In such case, the tendency is
for them to think more slowly in the language where they have lesser fluency,
so that if this is the language used in school, then, they are at risk for learning
problems.
3. Parents who choose bilingualism should consider whether they can help their
children achieve fluency in both languages.
4. Children who speak their immigrant parents’ language tend to be attached to
their parents’ culture of origin and therefore are able to speak the language.
Bilingual parents should weight the advantages and disadvantages of
bilingualism and decide on the kind of linguistic environment they will provide
their children.
Learning a second language is a constructive process similar to learning a
native language. This is made possible through interactions with the children
and adults.
When parents talk with preschool children learning to speak their native
language, they scaffold and extend the children’s language. Parents find a
way to understand the children’s special words for things. This is called
“motherese.” The kind of adaptation done by parents in the process of
learning the language.
Students learning English as a second language tend to mix English with
their native language. They shift back and forth within sentences. This
misunderstood phenomenon is called code switching (Troika, 1981 as cited
by Tompkins, 2002) Code switching is a special linguistic and social skill.
Sometimes students read the text in English and mentally translate it into their
native language for easier understanding.
Based from having learned to speak their native language on account of
interactions between the members of the family, children acquire an
understanding of the language system.
Listening to parents tell and read aloud stories also contributes to this
knowledge. From the elementary grades, they learn about phonics, spelling,
semantics, vocabulary, and grammar.
Children from various cultural groups bring with them backgrounds of
learning experiences unique to their group. This is the reason why they find
learning English as a second language difficult.
Language and culture have important implications for how children learn
language in school and how teachers teach language. Some implications are:
1. Children use the four language systems at the same time in the process of
communicating.
2. Children bring their unique background of experiences to the process of
learning.
3. Children’s cultural and linguistic diversity impact on the students’ learning
process.
From birth, infants listen to sounds of speech and that of their native
language. Babbling starts at the end of the second month. This usually
reflects the sounds they hear in the native language. At the age of 12 months,
infants utter the first word. It is only in the second year where there is
vocabulary expansion. However, the difficulties related to articulation and
pronunciation are observed.
Children may communicate single words not only to name things but also
to communicate more complex thoughts. This is usually called holophrase –
the first stage of language acquisition.
In this process adults use names that will show the distinctions children
need to make in using the objects named. Usually, children learn the meaning
of new words upon hearing them, even just once. This refers to the ability to
map the meaning of a new word used in context. That is, if a thing has a
name. it is not likely to be called by another. Another strategy used in learning
new words is bootstrapping – which is using their knowledge of word class
ad syntactic clues to learn the meanings of new words.
Fast mapping is the child’s ability to map the meaning of a new word onto
a referent after hearing the word used on context just once.
Holophrase is a single word used to represent a phrase or sentence:
typical of the first stage of language acquisition.
Study Guide
1. Why is it important for teachers to know about linguistic and literacy
development of children and adolescents?
2. What are the relevance of knowing theories of language development?
Chapter 4 Cognitive Development of Children and Adolescents
Objective
At the end of this chapter, the students are expected to:
1. Identify the theories of cognition.
2. Explain the various theories of intelligence and learning styles.
3. Describe the factors affecting development.
4. Categorize exceptional development.
A. Universal Changes
Universal changes are changes all individuals undergo as biological
organism. We all go through the process of growth and maturation as we age.
Every organism is subject to a genetically programmed maturing process. In
other words, all physical changes that happen from infancy to adulthood are
programmed and are part of the plan for the physical body.
Some changes are universal arising from shared experiences that
eventually serve as shared patterns of normal experiences like the right time
to marry, right time to enter into a serious relationship and the right time to live
an independent life. Even the concept of three meals a day, breakfast, lunch
and dinner is a shared universal experience.
Age norms can lead to ageism, a set of prejudicial attitudes about older
adults, analogous to sexism and racism (Palmore, 1990 as cited by Bee and
Boyd, 2002). For example, as workers age, they are perceived to be less
efficient, traditional in their ways because they are no longer receptive to
change. Although this is more of a misconception, still the idea of retirement
due to age has revolved around the social expectations about the appropriate
age for retirement, prompting people to set a specific retirement age or simply
reduce working hours in later adulthood.
B. Group-Specific Changes
Group-specific changes are changes manifested and observed from
members growing up together in a particular group and hence influenced
heavily by the dominant culture. This includes a system of meanings,
customs, language values, attitudes, traits, laws, beliefs, moral guidelines,
and physical artifacts like tools, work of arts and dwellings. This complex and
diversified totality of symbols and meanings are handed down from one
generation to another and shape the development of the individual.
C. Individual Changes
These are changes typical of particular individuals and which result from
unique, unshared events. Every individual is unique, a product of a unique
combination of genes which sets him apart from anyone. This is attributed to
genetic differences. For example, body build, body type, skin color, facial
contours, represents the category of individual differences. There are also
characteristics unique to person like intelligence and personality, which
constitute another class of individual differences.
Other individual differences according to child development theorists are
the result of the timing of a development event. They are the critical period
and the sensitive period.
The critical period is the stage at which an individual is most sensitive to
the presence or absence of some particular experience.
The sensitive period is the stage at which a child may be particularly
responsive to specific forms of experience or particularly influenced by their
absence. A situation where a child between 6 to 12 months under the care of
a nanny in the absence of a working mother spends less hours with the child
will most likely impact on the emotional bonding between mother and child.
Still another important concept related to timing is the idea of on-time and
off-time events (Neugartea, 1979 as cited by Bee and Boyd, 2002). It says an
experience that occurs at a time expected possess lesser difficulties than one
which is not. Since the situation comes when it is expected, the individual is
able to make preparations or adjustment to meet the demands of the change.
Unexpected changes in life patterns may cause serious disruptions in the
regular activities and eventually pose hazards to the individual.
Atypical Development
It is another kind of individual change. This kind of development is harmful to
the individual in that it deviated from the typical or normal development path.
Usually, this points to the abnormal or maladaptive behavior. An alcoholic,
drug addict, mentally retarded, even those with hyperactivity disorder are
examples of deviants or individuals with atypical development.
In the past, most developmentalists held the view that development was the
result of maturation. However, development has been viewed lately, in
particular by modern developmentalists as influenced by both environment
and genes.
Development is a continuous process involving smooth and gradual change
over time and in difficult steps or stages. Still some developmentalists argue
over the role played by individual or contextual, influences. As it is, they agree
that cultural context is a factor to any phase of development.
Some developmentalists continue to debate the question of whether
individual or contextual influences are more important in determining
development.
Most developmentalists agree however that cultural context must be
considered in any account of development.
Theoretical Perspectives on Development
Theories serve two functions. First, they help explain the knowledge about
how children develop and second, they encourage further research anchored
on predictions about behavior that can be tested and evaluated. While they
take varied positions on the issue or concept of development, they are seen
as being complimentary to each other.
Structural-organismic perspectives zero in on the composites of the
developing organism. They consider the quality of various changes in the
stages of human development. Freud’s psychodynamic theory and Erickson’s
psychosocial theory belong to this category. They assert that a child responds
to a set of biological drives. Freud recognizes the early experiences as
determinants of later development. For example, the development of
personality is always associated with the concepts of id, ego, and superego.
On one hand, from the Freudian theory is the deprivation or satisfaction
child’s drives that consequently impacts on the later adult personality.
Table 2
Risk of Down Syndrome (Sources: Gardner and Sutherland, 1996; Hsu, 1998)
Maternal Age Down Syndrome Down Syndrome Frequency of Down
Detected at 9 to 11 Detected at 16 Syndrome Among
weeks by CVS weeks by Births
Amniocentesis
20-24 1 / 1,400
25-29 1 / 1,100
30 1 / 900
35 1 / 250 1 / 250 1 / 385
40 1 / 80 1 / 70 1 / 100
45 1 / 25 1 / 25 1 / 40
Over 45 1 / 20 1 / 15 1 / 25
Study Guide
1. Explain the intellectual development reflecting changes in the cognitive structures
of children.
2. Explain the concept of the zone of proximal development of Vygotsky.
3. Enumerate and explain the basic assumptions of information-processing
approach.
4. Compare and contrast the theories of nativism, ethology, and Socio-biology.
5. Explain the contextual variables that affect development and specify how they
interact.
6. Enumerate and explain the eight (8) multiple intelligences of Gardner.
7. Name the factors affecting development. How are they related to each other?
8. Discuss giftedness and mental retardation.
The child’s sole interpersonal relationships in the early years are with his
parents who present their cultural beliefs, values, and attitudes to their
children. The parents, own personalities as well as their own family
backgrounds, attitudes, values, education, religious beliefs, socioeconomic
status, and gender influence the socialization process.
Socialization is the process by which parents and others set the child’s
standards of behavior, attitudes, skills, and motives to conform closely to what
the society deems appropriate to his role in society.
Children interact with peers and the interaction is more free and more
egalitarian than their parents. This helps in the development of the children’s
social competence and acquisition of the concept of social justice.
Development of Identity
James E. Marcia, a psychologist, had figured well on research that dealt
with identity issues during adolescence. For him, identity is internal,
selfconstructed, dynamic organization of drives, abilities, and individual history.
He has identified four identity or statuses and correlated them with other
aspects of personality. These are anxiety, self-esteem, moral reasoning, and
patterns of social behavior. These stages do not form a progression: and are not
in any way included in the identity search but they are not necessarily permanent.
A person’s identity status may change as he or she develops (Cobb, 2001).
Marcia’s four identity statuses are determined by the presence or absence
of the two elements which to Erickson are crucial to forming identity: crisis and
commitment. Marcia defines crisis as a period of conscious decision making
while commitment as a personal investment in an occupation or a system of
beliefs (ideology).
Marcia identifies four categories of identity information: identity
achievement, foreclosure, diffusion, and moratorium.
1. Identity Achievement. (crisis leading to commitment). Those with identity
achievements are characterized by flexible strength and tendency to be
thoughtful, although not so introspective. These individuals function well
under stress, have sense of humor, are receptive to new ideas and ready for
intimate relationships in accordance to their own standards.
2. Foreclosure. (commitment without crisis) characterized by rigid strength;
selfassurance; self-satisfied; and strong sense of family ties. These are the
people who recognize the need for law and order, as well as obedience to a
leader. They can be dogmatic when their ideas are put to test.
3. Identity Diffusion (no commitment). They are those who shy away from
commitment. As carefree individuals, they drift in the absence of focus.
Oftentimes they are carefree, thus, in the absence of intimate relationship
they become unhappy.
4. Moratorium (in crisis). They may not necessarily be in good relationship but
express preference for intimacy. They are characteristically talkative,
competitive, lively and anxious.
Erickson believes that individuals have to confront with old troubles before
they arrive at an identity. This, he refers to the sense of self usually achieved
through an examination and commitment to the particular role an in individual
should pay as an adult member of society. Identity affords the individual to
know himself better, prepare for his future and realize his dreams and
ambitions. The perception of self includes how others see us, and the
importance they attach to the values and accomplishments (Patterson,
Socthing and Marcia, 1992 as cited by Cobb, 2001).
In defining identity, Erickson also considered three domains to be of
paramount importance: sexuality as expressed in an adult gender role
occupation, and ideology or religious and political beliefs.
The Process of Identity Consolidation