An introduction to child language development
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
An introduction to child language development
(Learning about language)
Addison Wesley Longman, 1999
- : pbk
Available at / 81 libraries
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INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY LIBRARY図
: pbk371.458/F417i05407794,
371.458/F417i/c.205434265 -
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [214]-228) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume introduces the field of child language development studies, and presents hypotheses in an accessible, largely non-technical language, aiming to demonstrate the relationship between these hypotheses and interpretations of data. It makes the assumption that having a theory of language development is as important as having reliable data about what children say and understand, and it advocates a combination of both `rationalist' and more 'empiricist' traditions. In fact, the author overtly argues that different traditions provide different pieces of the picture, and that taking any single approach is unlikely to lead to productive understanding.
Susan Foster-Cohen explores a range of issues, including the nature of prelinguistic communication and its possible relationship to linguistic development; early stages of language development and how they can be viewed in the light of later developments; the nature and role of children's experience with the language(s) around them; variations in language development due to both pathological and non-pathological differences between children, and (in the latter case) between the languages they learn; later oral language development; and literacy. The approach is distinctly psycholinguistic and linguistic rather than sociolinguistic, although there is significant treatment of issues which intersect with more sociolinguistic concerns (e.g. literacy, language play, and bilingualism). There are exercises and discussion questions throughout, designed to reinforce the ideas being presented, as well as to offer the student the opportunity to think beyond the text to ideas at the cutting edge of research.
The accessible presentation of key issues will appeal to the intended undergraduate readership, and will be of interest to those taking courses in language development, linguistics, developmental psychology, educational linguistics, and speech pathology. The book will also serve as a useful introduction to students wishing to pursue post-graduate courses which deal with child language development.
Table of Contents
1. What do children bring to the acquisition task?
2. How do children communicate before they can use language
3. When does language development start?
4. How do young children think language works?
5. What influences language development?
6. Do all children learn language the same way?
7. Does it matter which language(s) you learn?
8. When does language development stop?
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