13 - First Language Acquisition
13 - First Language Acquisition
• 1970
• 13 years old
• Her father was intolerant of any kind of noise and had beaten her
• Genie’s only other human contact was with her mother who was
forbidden to spend more than a few minutes with the child to feed her.
Genie
• She was unable to use language when she was first brought into
care.
• However, within a short period of time,
Please watch the video titled Secret of the Wild Child on halroqi.kau.edu.sa
First Language Acquisition
• with deaf parents who gave their normal-hearing son ample exposure
to TV and radio programs, the boy did not acquire an ability to speak
or understand English.
language.
Input
•Exaggerated intonation
•Extra loudness
•A lot or of repetition
•Babytalk forms:
• Built into a lot of caregiver speech is a type of conversational structure that seems to
assign interactive roles to young children even before they become speaking participants.
• MOTHER: Look!
activities.
• The biological schedule is very much related to the maturation
• The first few months: the child gradually becomes capable of producing
• 4 months: the ability to bring the back of the tongue into regular contact
• 5 months: hear the difference between the vowels [a] and [i] and the
• 9-10 months:
• 10-11months:
• Standing position
• Capable of using vocalization to express emotions & emphasis.
• More complex syllable combination (ma-da-ga-ba)
• A lot of sound play & attempted imitations.
Note:
• There is substantial variation among children in terms of the age at
• 12-18 months.
• The child not only produces speech, but receives feedback confirming that the
• Telegraphic Speech
• By the age 2½, vocabulary is expanding rapidly + the child is initiating more talk
• 3 years:
• Better pronunciation
The acquisition process
not.
The acquisition process
book)
Developing morphology
• The next morphological development is typically the marking of regular plurals, (-s),
overgeneralization.
• The child overgeneralizes the rule of adding -s to form plurals and will talk about foots
and mans.
• When the alternative pronunciation of the plural morpheme used in houses (i.e.
ending in [-əz]) comes into use, overgeneralization happens again and forms such as
boyses or footses can be heard.
• At the same time as this overgeneralization is taking place, some children also begin
using irregular plurals such as men appropriately for a while, but then overgeneralize
again and producing expressions like some mens and two feets, or even two feetses.
Developing morphology
• Not long after, the use of possessive ‘s’ appears (mommy’s bag)
• At about the same time, forms of verb to be appear (is, are, was)
• At about the same time of the appearance of was, irregular verbs (went, came) appear.
• Then, the -ed for past tense appears (played, walked).
• Once it appears, the irregular verb forms disappear for a while, replaced by
• For a period, the -ed inflection may be added to everything (walkeded, wented)
• The child works out (after the age of 4) which forms are regular and which are not.
• Finally, the -s marker for 3rd person singular present tense verbs appears with full verbs
fast and she said the owl eat candy and he run fast.
Developing syntax
Where Doggie?
Where horse go?
2. Utter the expression with a rise in intonation towards the end
Can I have a piece? / Did I caught it?/ Will you help me?
3. The 3rd stage questions are generally quite close to the adult model
no sit here
no fall
Forming negative
• During the two-word stage children use their limited vocabulary to refer to a
acquisition.
References