First Language Acquisition
First Language Acquisition
First Language Acquisition
early childhood
What are developmental sequences?
The order in which certain features of a language
(e.g. negation) are acquired in language learning.
Also called developmental stages.
Phonology involves the rules about the structure and
sequence of speech sounds.
Semantics consists of vocabulary and how concepts are
Four main
expressed through words.
Grammar involves two parts. The first, syntax, is the rules
of
tense, active or passive voice, etc.).
Pragmatics involves the rules for appropriate and effective
• Uses one or more words with meaning (this may be a fragment of a word)
• Understands simple instructions, especially if vocal or physical cues are given
• Practices inflection
• Is aware of the social value of speech
6 to 12
months
Acquisition of Grammatical morphemes
Roger Brown’s study (1973):
Approximate order of acquiring grammatical morphemes
• Present progressive –ing (running)
• Plural –s (books)
•Irregular past forms (went)
•Possessive -’s (daddy’s hat)
• Copula (am/is/are)
• Articles (a/an/the)
• Regular past –ed (walked)
• Third person singular simple present –s (he runs)
• Auxiliary ‘be’ (He is coming)
Stages in Grammar Morphemes:
Negation
Stages Features of LA (negation) Examples
1 Negation is usually expressed by the word ‘no’, either all No. No cookie. No comb hair
alone or as the first word in the utterance.
2 Utterances grow longer and the sentence subject may be Daddy no comb hair. Don’t touch
included. The –ve word appears just before the verb. that!
3 The negative element is inserted into a more complex I can’t do it. He don’t want it
sentences. (Adding forms of the –ve other than ‘no’.
4 Children begin to attach the –ve elements to the correct You didn’t have supper. She
form of auxiliary verbs such as ‘do’ and ‘be’. doesn’t want it.
Stages in Questions
Stages Features of LA (Questions)
1 Children’s earliest questions are single words or simple two or three word Cookie? Mommy book?
sentences with rising intonation.
2 Children use the word order of the declaratIve sentence, with rising You like this? I have some?
intonation
3 Children notice that the structure of questions is different and begin to Can I go?
produce questions Are you happy?
4 Some questions are formed by subject-auxiliary inversion. They also add Are you going to play with me? Do dogs
‘do’ in questions in which there would be no auxiliary in the declarative like ice cream?
version of the sentence.09
5 Both wh- and yes/no questions are formed correctly. Are these your boots? Why did you do
that?
6 Children are able to correctly form all question types, including –ve and
complex embedded questions.
The-pre school years
At the age of four, most children are able to ask questions, give commands,
report real events, and create stories about imaginary ones with correct word
order and grammatical markers most of the time.
Children (3-4 year olds) begin to learn vocabulary at the rate of several words a day.
They begin to acquire less frequent and more complex linguistic structures
such as passives and relative clauses.
They develop their ability in using the language in a widening social environment
and variety of situations.
Children also begin to develop metalinguistic awareness. E.g, the ability to treat
language as an object separate from the meaning it conveys.
The school years
1.Children develop their language as they grow up.
2. Reading gives a major boost to metalinguistic awareness (language are form as well as meaning).
3. Metalinguistic awareness refers to the ability to treat language as an object, separate from the
meaning it conveys. A dramatic development in metalinguistic awareness occurs when children begin to
learn to read. They see words represented by letters on a page and start to discover that words and
sentences have multiple meaning. e.g., “drink the chair” (5 year-olds’ reaction: silly) “cake the eat” (5
year-olds’ reaction: wrong) “Why is caterpillar longer than train?” (a riddle)
4.In the school years, children also develop vocabularies. (Reading assignments, for pleasure whether
narrrative or non-fiction). However, the amount depends on how widely they read (Nagy, Herman and
Anderson 1985).
The school years Language registers.
Children learn how written language differs from spoken language, how the language used to speak to the
principal is different from the language of a narative.
Explaining First
Language Acquisition
Behaviorism: Say what I say
Grammar or
Linguistic data LAD/UG Output
linguistic
(input) (performance)
competence
Evidence used to support Chomsky’s innatist position: 1. Virtually all children successfully learn
their native language at a time in life when they would not be expected to learn anything else so
complicated (i.e. biologically programmed). 2. Language is separate from other aspects of
cognitive developments (e.g., creativity and social grace) and may be located in a different
“module" of the brain. 3. The language children are exposed to does not contain examples of all
the linguistic rules and patterns. 4. Animals cannot learn to manipulate a symbol system as
complicated as the natural language of a 3- or 4-year-old child. 5. Children acquire grammatical
rules without getting explicit instruction. Therefore, children’s acquisition of grammatical rules is
probably guided by principle of an innate UG which could apply to all languages.
Problems of Innatism
too much emphasis on the “final state” (i.e. the linguistic
competence of adult native speakers), but not enough on the
developmental aspects of language acquisition.
Language acquisition is an example of children’s ability to learn
from experience. What children need to know is essentially
available in the language they are exposed to.
Interactionist/developmental
Perspectives: Learning from inside and out
Language develops as a result of the interplay between the innate learning
ability of children and the environment in which they develop.
Developmental psychologists attribute more importance to the environment
than the innatists, though they also recognize a powerful learning mechanism in
the human brain.
They see language acquisition as similar to and influenced by the acquisition of
other kinds of skill and knowledge, rather than as something that is largely
independent of the child’s experience and cognitive development.
Interactionist/developmental
Perspectives: Learning from inside and out
Piaget
Language is dependent upon and springs from cognitive development. That is,
children’s cognitive development determines their language development. (e.g., the
use of words as “bigger” or “more” depends on children’s understanding of the
concepts they represent.)
The developing cognitive understanding is built on the interaction between the child
and the things which can be observed, touched, and manipulated.
Language was one of a number of symbol systems developed in childhood, rather
than a separate module of the mind. Language can be used to represent knowledge
that children have acquired through physical interaction with the environment.
Interactionist/developmental
Perspectives: Learning from inside and out
Vygotsky: sociocultural theory of human mental processing.
Language develops primarily from social interaction.
Zone of proximal development (ZPD): a level that a child is able to do when
there is support from interaction with a more advanced interlocutor. That is, a
supportive interactive environment enables children to advance to a higher level
of knowledge and performance than s/he would be able to do independently.
He observed the importance of conversations which children have with adults
and with other children and saw in these conversations the origins of both
language and thought.
Interactionist/developmental
Perspectives: Learning from inside and out
Piaget Vigostky
language developed thought was
as a symbol essentially
system to express internalized
knowledge speech, and
acquired through speech emerged in
interaction with social interaction.
the physical world
Language socialization framework: