Stages of Language Development in Children PDF

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ContrastyDiopside

Uploaded by ContrastyDiopside

مدرسة النخبة

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language development child language linguistics child development

Summary

This document outlines the stages of language development in children, from crying to complete utterances. It describes key milestones such as cooing, babbling, and the development of vocabulary and grammar.

Full Transcript

4 Stages of Language Development in Children Day 1: Crying is an indication of language ability. It's the first form...

4 Stages of Language Development in Children Day 1: Crying is an indication of language ability. It's the first form of language. Stage 1: 0- 2 months: cooing, the production of vowel-like sounds aaaaah, ooooooh (mainly a, o sounds) Stages 2: 3-6 months: infant starts babbling, adding consonants to sounds maaaaaa, baaaaa, ‫( غاااااااا‬mainly a, o, e vowels and b, m, d, t ‫غ‬consonants) By the end of first year, infants develop a link between communication and sound-making signals, which is the onset of language. Stage 3: Beginning of 2nd year One-word utterances, first words emergence Ma(ma), ba(ba), da(da), bab bab bab -Very few words (about 5 words) Stage 4: 18 months olds -Vocabulary explosion/spurt, learning words at a faster rate (20-50 words) -Overgeneralizations: e.g., baba to refer to all men, mama to refer to all women, dada to refer to all children, kuku to refer to all birds, hau-hau to refer to all animals, etc. Stage 5: Just before end of 2nd year and beginning of 3rd year Two-word utterances -dad go, mamy milk, go sleep (two nouns or an noun and a verb) -Telegraphic speech (abbreviated language of a telegram) -Overgeneralizations too (cf., e.g., mama halawa, sakr bab) the, and = functions -Very few inflections students, teacher = contents -Limit to here-and now environment, i.e., the child's immediate environment Stage 6: Third year to beginning of 4th year Complete utterances -Some conversational skills -Wider here-and-now skills 5 -Metalinguistic awareness (e.g., bad words) -More vocabulary items system language structure- meaning- sound Stage 7: 5-6 years -The child possesses the basic syntactic, semantic, phonological, and phonetic systems of L1 -Achieves rather adult-like fluency and rather good mastery of L1 knowledge -Possesses more conversational skills so similar to those of adults -Deeper and wider metalinguistic awareness Stage 8: 7-13 years -Development of more complex, adult-like conversational skills -More advanced and complex grammar and knowledge of L1. -Achieves complete mastery and fluency of L1 knowledge in terms of virtually all aspects.

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