Monday, 29 September 2014

Child aquisition theories


Revision guide for the theories of Language Acquisition

 

There are 4 theories;

·         Behaviourist (Skinner)

·         Cognition (Piaget)

·         Innateness (Chomsky)

·         Social/Cultural (Vygotsky)

These 4 theories show how the language acquisition of a child developed.

Behaviourist theory

Children learn to speak by copying others and through positive and negative reinforcement.

·         Positive reinforcement results in increase of a repetition process.                               E.G. a child says “Mummy” and the mum rewards the child in some way, then the child thinks that’s correct so they do it again.  

·         Negative reinforcement results in a reduction of the repetition process.                    E.G. If a mum shouts “NO” then the child would continue to say the thing they did before and the correction will not have any impact.

Skinner put forward the idea of the Operant Process. According to him language is an activity a child acquires with external force, for example a child learns whatever his/her environment teaches them.

To support his theory he conducted ‘Skinners rats’ experiment.

 

 

 

 

 

·         Basically the rat accidentally pressed a bar and this led to the rat getting some food, therefore the rat did it again because they wanted the food again. And then the same repeated with a flashlight in the box to get the food.

·         Therefore this shows that a child imitates no matter what he hears from his parents, so language acquisition is an act of imitation.

 

 

Limitations of the Behaviourist theory

·         Language is based on a set of rules ore structures, which can’t be worked out simply by imitating individual utterances.  The mistakes that children make reveal that they are not just imitating but they actively work language out and apply the rules.

E.G. A child who says “drinked” instead of “drank” is not copying an adult but they are over applying that rule.

The child knows that past tense verbs should have letters added to the end so they just add on anything.

·         Children are often unable to repeat what an adult says, especially if the adult utterance contains a structure the has not yet started to use.

For example an American psycholinguist David Mcneill created this as an example:

Child: “Nobody don’t like me”

Mother: No say “Nobody likes me”

Child: “Nobody don’t like me”

Eight repetitions of this

Mother: No, now listen carefully say “Nobody likes me.”

Child: “Oh! Nobody don’t likes me”

However in conflict to the Behaviourist Theory, Chomsky presented his ‘Mentalists Theory.’ This theory had the view that a child acquires learning with his/her cognitive ability whereas environmental factors are not disturbed in the learning of language.

Cognition Theory (Piaget)

Stage 1

The first stage of development, starting from birth to until about the age of 2, this is called the Sensorimotor stage.

In this stage children’s contact with the world around them depends entirely on the movements that they make and the feelings that they experience.

Whenever they encounter a new object they shake it, throw it or put it in their mouth therefore they begin to learn certain characteristics due to TRIAL AND ERROR.

 

Stage 2

The second stage of development is called the Preoperational stage. This begins around age 2 and finishes around 6 or 7.

During this stage children become able to think in symbolic terms, to form ideas from words and symbols. They understand spatial and numerical concepts and the distinction between the past and the future. The child’s thinking is very egocentric and they often assume that other people see situations for his or her viewpoint.

Stage 3

The third stage is called the Concrete Operations stage, this begins at 6 or 7 and finishes around 11 or 12 years old. Due to the child experiencing a lot more of the world now, children start to imagine events that occur outside their own lives.

They begin to conceptualize and create sequences of logical reasoning, although it still depends on concrete things. And begin to study disciplines such as; Maths.  Only an exceptional child can solve problems with multiple variables by breaking them down systematically.

 Stage 4

The last stage is called the Formal Operations stage and this begins at age 11 or 12 years old.

The new capabilities developed in this stage are things such as; the ability to reason hypothetically and deductively this is normally by the age of 15.

By the end of this stage the adolescents can use formal abstract logic, and think about probabilities and moral issues such as Justice.  

Innateness Theory (Chomsky)

‘Children are born with the capacity for language acquisition and that this ability makes the task of learning a first language easier than it would otherwise be. ’

The human brain is ready naturally for language in the sense when children are exposed to speech, certain general principles for discovering or structuring language automatically begin to operate.

A limitation of Chomsky’s work was that it was only theoretical, he didn’t actually study real children. His theory focused on critical grammatical explanations, and the theory was mostly about children being exposed to a language. There was no sufficient reference of interaction between children and their care givers, for example if a normal hearing child who had two deaf parents and is exposed to languages through making him watch television his knowledge of language will be limited. Television is not going to help the child gain complete knowledge of a language, because a child needs to interact with others to learn a language as well however Chomsky didn’t acknowledge this.

Social/Cultural Theory (Vygotsky)

According to Vygotsky language acquisition involves not only a child’s exposure to words but also an interdependent process of growth between thought and language.

This theory is based on children acquiring knowledge as a result of engaging in social experiences. Through social and language interactions, older and more experienced members of the community teach younger and less experienced members the skills, values and knowledge needed to be a productive member of the community.

Through the development of inner speech, children straddle the divide between thought and language, eventually being able to express their thoughts coherently to others.

Vygotsky’s theory stresses the importance of communication with others as a major factor in the development of a child’s language, which stimulates the development of thought. Vygotsky’s theory views the important effect that an adult has on the development of language.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, 25 September 2014

Coursework proposal

I am proposing an idea for my coursework project, my initial idea is to look at various birthday cards. Including children, adults, older people. And then compare the use of lexis in each of the birthday cards to see how age has affected it.
The reason I would like to do this is because it seems like an interesting project to do, and the data is easily obtainable.