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1st Language Acquisition: How Do Humans Acquire Speech?

Communicative competence refers to a speaker's ability to use language appropriately in social contexts rather than just their grammatical knowledge. To have communicative competence, one must demonstrate pragmatic, organizational, and sociolinguistic skills to communicate effectively and appropriately in real-world situations. Fluency involves using these competencies with ease, flexibility, and accuracy in spontaneous interactions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views

1st Language Acquisition: How Do Humans Acquire Speech?

Communicative competence refers to a speaker's ability to use language appropriately in social contexts rather than just their grammatical knowledge. To have communicative competence, one must demonstrate pragmatic, organizational, and sociolinguistic skills to communicate effectively and appropriately in real-world situations. Fluency involves using these competencies with ease, flexibility, and accuracy in spontaneous interactions.

Uploaded by

SADIA SHAN
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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1st Language

Acquisition

How do humans
acquire speech?
So how DO we learn
our first language?
L1 acquisition

 Sound production/babbling
 Phonological acquisition
 Morphological/Syntactical
acquisition
 Semantic development
Caretaker Speech
 A register characterized by:
– Simplified lexicon
– Phonological reduction
– Higher pitch
– Stressed intonation
– Simple sentences
– High number of interrogatives (Mom) &
imperatives (Dad)
Caretaker Speech
ASL Caretaker Speech
Some of the major features:

signing on the baby's body (when the location should be on


the signer)
using the baby's hands to sign on the adult's or child's body
placing the child on the lap and facing away from the mother
signing on the object
signing using the object
signing bigger than normal
signing repeated more often then normal
sign lasts longer than normal
signing special “baby” signs rather than adult signs

BSL Caretaker Speech


Acquisition of phonetics
 Few weeks: cooing and gurgling, playing with
sounds. Their abilities are constrained by
physiological (normal functions of living
organisms and their parts) limitations.
 4 months: distinguish between [a] and [i], so their
perception skills are good.
 4-6 months: children babble (the production of
meaningless strings of speech sounds by
infants), putting together vowels and consonants.
This is not a conscious process! Experiment with
articulation
 7-10 months: starts repeated babbling.
 10-12 months, children produce a variety of
speech sounds. (even ‘foreign’ sounds)
Acquisition of phonology
 Early stage: Unanalyzed syllables
 15-21 months: words as a sequence of phonemes.
 Mastery of sounds differing in distinctive
features (e.g., voicing)
 Duplicated syllables: mama, dada. They reduce
= banana  [na.na] 2 syllable words
 Early mastery of intonation contours (even in
non-tone languages)
 Perception comes before production (‘fis’ or
‘fish’?)
Phonological Processes
Lexicon
 Begin with simple lexical items for
people/food/toys/animals/body functions
 Lexical Achievement:
• 1-2 years old 200-300 words (avg)
• 3 years old 900 words
• 4 years old 1500 words
• 5 years old 2100 words
• 6-7 years old 2500 words
• High school grad 40,000 – 60,000 words!
 “5,000 per year, 13 words a day” --
Miller & Gildea
The acquisition of morphosyntax
 At about 12 months, children begin
producing words consistently.
 One-word stage (holophrastic stage):
– Name people, objects, etc.
– An entire sentence is one word
 Two-word stage:
– Approximately 18-24 months
– Use consistent set of word orders: N-V, A-N,
V-N…
– With structure determined by semantic
relationships
• agent+action (baby sleep)
• possessor+possession (Mommy book)
 Telegraphic stage (only content words)
Negative Formations

 Negatives
 1st stage - attach no/not to beginning of sentence
(sometimes at end)
 2nd stage – negatives appear between subject and
verb
 3rd stage – appearance of nobody/nothing &
anybody/anything & inconsistent use of “to be”
verb is and auxiliary “dummy” do verb.
Question Formations
 1st stage – wh- word placed in front of rest
of sentence: Where daddy go?
 2nd stage – addition of an auxiliary verb:
Where you will go?
 3rd stage – subject noun changes places
with the auxiliary: Where will you go?
Acquisition of Semantics

 Concrete before abstract:


– ‘in/on’ before ‘behind/in front’
 Overextensions:
– Using ‘moon’ for anything round
– Using ‘dog’ for any four-legged
animals
 Underextensions:
– The word ‘bird’ may not include
‘pigeon’, etc
Reviewing Linguistic Stages
 6-12 weeks: Cooing (googoo, gurgling, coocoo)
 6 months: Babbling (baba, mama, dada)
 8-9 months: Intonation patterns
 1-1.5 years: Holphrastic stage (one word)
 2 years: Two-word stage
 2.5 years: Telegraphic stage
 3,4 – 11 years: Fluent speech w/errors
 12 years+: Fluent speech
What about
Second Language
Acquisition?
L2
Second Language
Acquisition

Differences from L1
acquisition
Teaching Methods
Terms/Associations
 Native Language = L1 =1st Language, mother
tongue, heart language
 Second Language = L2 = Target Language or
Learner Language

 Second Language Acquisition (SLA)


– Research investigates how people attain proficiency in
a language which is not their mother tongue
Stages of L2 Aquisition
 Stage 1 – Random errors/wild guesses
– The different city is another one in the another two. Or
John cans sing.
 Stage 2 – Emergent
– Learner cannot correct errors even when pointed out.
• L: I go New York
• NS: You will go to New York? When?
• L: 1972.
• NS: Oh, you went to New York in 1972.
• L: Yes, I go 1972.
Stages of L2 Acquisition
 Stage 3 – Systematic
– Learners can correct errors if pointed out:
• L: Many fish are in the lake. These fish are serving in the
restaurants near the lake.
• NS: [laughing] The fish are serving?
• L: [laughing] Oh, no, the fish are served in the restaurants!
 Stage 4 – Stabilization
– Learners can self-correct.
– However, often they may not correct errors that aren’t
brought to their attention and may manifest
fossilization (Fossilization refers to the process in
which incorrect language becomes a habit and cannot
easily be corrected.) of their L2.
L2 Teaching Methods
 Grammar-translation
– Mother tongue, vocabulary lists, grammar, classical
texts, reading important
 Direct (Berlitz) method
– Active oral interaction, spontaneous use, no
translation between L1 and L2, little grammar, good
for smaller classes
 Audio-lingual method
– Dialogue form, mimicry, set phrases, drills,
memorization, tapes, language labs, pronunciation
important, little use of mother tongue, popular in
military training, short-term effectiveness
 Today’s approach?
– Multiple approaches, customized, interactive
Communicative Competence
 What is it, and how do we know when we
have it?
– Pragmatic Competence:
• Functions of language:
– Discourse, sociolinguistic, cultural, contexts of use
– Organizational Competence:
• Grammatical:
– Vocabulary, morphology, syntax, phonology, graphology
• Textual:
– Cohesion, rhetorical organization

 What does it mean to be fluent?

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