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Tardif, Twila – 1991
Research and theory on language acquisition and language socialization are examined and compared. The language acquisition perspective is that the central question is how children acquire forms and patterns of language, with syntax at the core, so early and so rapidly. From the viewpoint of language socialization, the issue is not only of…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Language Acquisition
Weverink, Meike – 1990
An often-noted contrast between child and adult language is that young children produce sentences both with and without lexical subjects even if subjects are obligatory in the adult system. However, in Dutch, there is no such structural difference between the earliest stages of Dutch child grammar and the adult stage where subjects are concerned.…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Child Language, Contrastive Linguistics
Rescorla, Leslie; Okuda, Sachiko – 1982
The vocabulary development in the first 11 weeks of English acquisition by a 5-year-old Japanese girl was studied. The girl and her mother (a linguistic researcher) arrived in the United States at the start of the study. Lexical data from a language diary kept by the mother and from adult and peer sessions were pooled to produce a chronological…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Language, Comparative Analysis, English (Second Language)
Shore, Cecilia; Bauer, Patricia – 1983
The relationship between language and symbolic play was studied in a sample of children identified as referential in style (multiple noun utterances exceeded pronoun or no-noun utterances), as compared with a sample identified as expressive in style (pronoun utterances or no-noun utterances exceeded multiple noun utterances). Children were…
Descriptors: Child Language, Comparative Testing, Expressive Language, Individual Differences
Boggs, Stephen T. – 1983
A major purpose of the research reported here is to determine whether or not children of minority backgrounds possess the ability to tell stories and verbalize in narrative form at age 3 and 4. Narratives and speech play were collected over a 9-month period in two Headstart classes in Honolulu (Hawaii). The children, most of mixed backgrounds,…
Descriptors: Child Language, Classroom Communication, Discourse Analysis, Hawaiians
Thomas, Barbara – This Magazine, 1976
Suggests that a survey of ESL programs all across the country narrows the approach to the subject of the role of the Canadian schools in the development and education of non-English speaking immigrant children. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Child Language, Cultural Interrelationships, English (Second Language)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Savic, Svenka – Journal of Child Language, 1975
The early acquisition of the interrogative system, with data from Serbo-Croatian, is investigated. The subject is approached from the angle of adult-child interaction. A first-born pair of dizygotic twins were observed, beginning a month prior to the time when they first began to produce questions. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Child Language, Infant Behavior, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bednar, R. A. – Journal of School Psychology, 1974
The treatment of a 10-year-old elective mute boy is reported in detail. A learning principles based approach was used in a one-to-one therapeutic setting. Relatively normal speaking patterns were established after 15 months of treatment. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Modification, Case Studies, Child Language
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Dulay, Heidi; Burt, Marina – Language Learning, 1974
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English (Second Language)
Barbour, Nita Hale – Probe, 1974
Ninety-five children in 28 nursery school classrooms were used to investigate the relationships between teacher facilitative or directive verbal behavior in nursery school classrooms and seven aspects of child language change (receptive vocabulary, vocabulary of use, mean length of response, complexity of sentences, inquiry statements, dramatic…
Descriptors: Child Language, Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Interaction Process Analysis
Tarplee, Clare – 1989
Adult "redoing" sequences (expansions and repeats) in conversations between adult and child (age 1;6) are analyzed with a conversational analytic approach, and two ways in which redoing sequences are involved in the initiation of repair are explored. It is proposed that a redoing sequence picks up a child's utterance and displays it for some kind…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Error Correction
Smadi, Oglah – 1983
The acquisition of negative forms by a Jordanian Arabic speaker as evidenced in utterances from 19 months of age is examined. The language corpus consisted of selective samples of spontaneous daily speech and biweekly recorded speech sessions. Results suggest that although the subject's negation system is incomplete, it will be acquired by age 5.…
Descriptors: Arabic, Case Studies, Child Language, Contrastive Linguistics
Rogers-Warren, Ann K.; And Others – 1985
Changes in mothers' strategies for eliciting verbal responses (EVR's) as a function of child age were investigated in this study. Seven mother-child dyads were observed in their homes when the children were 16, 21, 24, 30, and 34 months of age. Mother EVR's were coded according to syntactic form, type of cue for child response, and complexity of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Language, Communication Strategies, Cues
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Wills, Dorothy Davis – 1981
Study of the use of baby talk in parental speech can illuminate the parent-child relationship, acquisition of adult language, the permissible modifications to language structure without diminishing meaning, and code-switching. This is illustrated in the baby talk embedded in adult-child conversation in the context of family and household in three…
Descriptors: African Languages, Child Language, English, Hausa
McIntosh, Margaret – 1988
The intricate quilt pattern of child language development can be pieced together from the numerous swatches of each child's language fabric which have been gathered by watching, looking, and listening when young children write. The necessity of watching, looking, and listening is demonstrated by the example of a preschooler's verbal protocol which…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Language, Language Acquisition, Phonics
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