How Children Learn Language: The Development of Speech Comprehension
How Children Learn Language: The Development of Speech Comprehension
Psycholinguistics
Week 3
Teacher: Zeineb Ayachi
How children learn language
The development of speech comprehension
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When does the understanding of speech begin and how does it relate to comprehension?
The development of speech comprehension
Yet such persons may learn to comprehend all that is spoken to them. Here’s an example:
Christopher Nolan is an Irish writer of some renown in the English language.
Brain-damaged since birth, Nolan has had little control over the muscles of his body, even
to the extent of having difficulty in swallowing food. He had to be strapped to his
wheelchair because he could not sit up by himself. Nolan could not utter recognizable
speech sounds.
The development of speech comprehension
Fortunately, though, his brain-damage was such that Nolan’s intelligence was
unimpaired and his hearing was normal; as a result he learned to understand speech
as a young child.
It was only many years later, though, after he had reached 10 years, and after he had
learned to read, that he was given a means to express his first words.
He did this by using a stick that was attached to his head to point to letters.
It was in this ‘unicorn’ manner, letter by letter, that he produced an entire book of
poems and short stories, Dam-burst of Dreams (Nolan, 1981), while still a teenager
(he was born in 1965).
This was followed some years later by an autobiographical book, Under the Eye of
the Clock (Nolan, 1988), also written in the letter-by-letter mode.
The development of speech comprehension
That speech understanding always precedes production is the pattern that continues
throughout the acquisition process whether it be for first words , elaborate syntax such
as passives, or the later acquisition of idioms and figurative speech.
It should also be noted that the two systems of comprehension and production do not
develop separately for the normal child.
As the child acquires an aspect of grammar for comprehension, the child will then try to
figure out how to use it in production.
The development of speech comprehension
Children will not learn language if all that they are exposed to is speech sound, no matter
how many times it is uttered.
Thus, for example, even if one heard the speech sound /neko/ a hundred times, one would
have no way of knowing that it means ‘cat’ (in Japanese) unless there was some
environmental clue.
Children may sometimes repeat words or phrases they hear, but this is not evidence for
learning unless the sounds are used in a meaningful context that is suitable for those
sound forms.
The development of speech comprehension
Language is a system that allows for the labelling of thoughts in terms of physical sound
so that the thoughts may be communicated to others.
Thought, however, is independent of language, including as it does ideas, feelings,
percepts, emotions, etc.
As such, thought provides the basis for speech comprehension, which in turn provides the
basis for speech production.
The development of speech comprehension
In learning the meaning of syntactic structures, simply hearing the speech sounds ‘John
chased Bill’, and knowing the meanings of the individual words ‘John’, ‘chased’, and
‘Bill’ is insufficient information for determining who is doing the chasing and who is
being chased.
One must hear sentences in conjunction with related events in the world in order to learn
that English has an Agent–Action–Object sequence.
Thus, by hearing the sentence ‘John chased Bill’ along with an experience of the event of
John having just chased Bill, the child is provided with a basis for learning that it was
‘John’ who did the chasing and that it was ‘Bill’ who was being chased.