preview

Child Language Development

Decent Essays

In the first five years of life, the child's brain develops more and faster than any other time in his life. Language and communication skills are critical phases in child's development. Good communication helps children to be able to engage in socialization and learn from their environment. Communication is about both speech that is means of communication verbally and language is using words put together to express feelings and thoughts.
The first two years of a child's life is a period of remarkable growth and development. During this period, children develop motor, social and cognitive skills that will serve them for the rest of their lives. But of all human faculties, the one that is most often noted as being uniquely human is language. …show more content…

Children do not come equipped at birth with the words of their language, but instead, they must be learned from the community of language users around them. The words a child hears are part of his linguistic environment, but the linguistic environment is embedded in a larger picture that includes the child's natural, everyday interactions, and experiences with objects, activities, and caregivers. It is in this rich, multimodal domain that children learn their first words, and so it is in this domain, a child's everyday life at home that he situates the study of early word learning.
The dynamics of the child's vocabulary growth and the role played by environmental factors play important role in word formation. While studies of word learning in a laboratory have contributed significantly to the understanding of learning mechanisms, its less about natural developmental patterns or the environmental structures that can provide footholds into how to use words and the way that language …show more content…

It's intrinsic and extrinsic to the learner. Intrinsically, when the learner is in a particular context he may have stronger expectations about the more contextually predictable and constrained words. Such words may also be more reliably incorporated into the learner's mental model of a situation. Extrinsically, words linked to fewer contexts may have a more limited scope and fewer possible associations between word and referent. Bruner (1983) makes a strong case for naturalistic, longitudinal methods in studying children's early language. In this work, Bruner recounts his research conducted in England in the late 1970s on two children's linguistic development. Roughly once every two weeks, for more than a year, Bruner and his colleagues visited the children in their homes for an hour, obtaining a half-hour recording of playtime activities. From these recordings, Bruner analyzed the transition from pre-linguistic communication into language, arguing that games and routines provided a "scaffold" into a language. Bruner's interest in studying language in the home is motivated by a social interactionist viewpoint, building on ideas such as Vygotsky's zone of proximal development (ZPD) (Vygotsky, 1986) in which caregivers help lead the child from their current level of competence toward

Get Access