Chapter 2-Theories of Language Development
Chapter 2-Theories of Language Development
THEORIES OF LANGUAGE
DEVELOPMENT
Learning outcomes :
THEORIES OF
Cognitive LANGUAGE Nativist
DEVELOPMENT
Social
Interactionism
BEHAVIORIST THEORY
B.F. Skinner (Burrhus Frederic Skinner)
- Born and raised in Susquehanna, Pennsylvania
-http://www.kidsdevelopment.co.uk/bfskinnersbehaviouraltheory.html
Reinforcement
Controlled
drilling
Memorization
Repetition
Imitation
NATIVIST THEORY
By Noam Chomsky
- Born in Philadelphia on December 7, 1928
- An intellectual prodigy who went on to earn a PhD in linguistics at the
University of Pennsylvania
They discover it by
Once the LAD is
Children need to matching the
activated, they
access to samples innate knowledge
discover the
of a natural of language to the
structure of the
language to structures of the
language to be
activate the device particular language
learned
in the environment
Sentence are formed in the following
sequence:
Primary
General
Linguistic Grammatical
language Child’s
Data Knowledge
Learning Speech
(Adult (Rules)
Principles
speech)
SOCIAL INTERACTIONISM THEORY
Emerged as a response to Behaviorism.
Independentl
Seeing Jointly doing
y doing
• Vygotsky proposed a way by which the
responsibility for psychological functioning is
gradually transferred from the adult to the
child.
• Adults structure activities so that the child’s
role is within the child’s Zone Of Proximal
Development (ZPD). ZPD is the difference
between what a learner can do without help
and what the learner can do with help.
Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)
• ZPD is as a means of assessing children’s potential for
learning as an alternative to the static measures of IQ and
mental age.
• When inside the ZPD, an adult and child may in many cases
not have the same definition of a situation at first.
• For example: building block. A child may view a set of blocks
as objects to be thrown or used for anything he or she likes.
Whereas an adult may view them as building materials.
• The adult and child must come some agreement on how to
define the situation before they can achieve an end goal.
The child’s performance is at a higher level with adult guidance.
Eventually, through participating with an adult, the child becomes
more capable of carrying out similar activities on their own
because this joint problem solving has been internalized by the
child.
COGNITIVE THEORY
By Jean Piaget
- Swiss developmental psychologist and philosopher known for his
epistemological studies with children