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Nebraska Department of Education, 2013
This resource provides parents with widely held expectations for their child's development prior to kindergarten and ways parents can encourage their child's growth. Although a child's growth and development follows a general pattern, all children grow at different rates. Some children will be doing things earlier or later than others. There's no…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Child Development, School Readiness, Parent Role
Yuan, Sylvia Hsin Wei – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Children use syntax as well as observations of events to learn verb meanings. This is known as syntactic bootstrapping. This dissertation investigated the origins and mechanisms of syntactic bootstrapping. Prior evidence suggested that two-year-olds, but not younger children, could use aspects of sentence structure to assign different…
Descriptors: Verbs, Sentence Structure, Sentences, Semantics
Malloy, Peggy – National Consortium on Deaf-Blindness, 2009
Long before children learn language, they communicate with gestures, vocalizations, facial expressions, and body language. This is known as prelinguistic (prior to language) communication. Most children learn this type of communication without formal teaching, but children who are deaf-blind may need guidance to learn it. This publication…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Deafness, Language Acquisition, Blindness
Boyd, Jeremy K.; Gottschalk, Erin A.; Goldberg, Adele E. – Language Learning, 2009
All natural languages rely on sentence-level form-meaning associations (i.e., linking rules) to encode propositional content about who did what to whom. Although these associations are recognized as foundational in many different theoretical frameworks (Goldberg, 1995, 2006; Lidz, Gleitman, & Gleitman, 2003; Pinker, 1984, 1989) and are--at least…
Descriptors: Phrase Structure, Task Analysis, Linguistic Input, Language Acquisition
Notley, Anna; Zhou, Peng; Crain, Stephen; Thornton, Rosalind – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2009
Children often produce nonadult responses to sentences with the focus operator only, such as "Only the cat is holding a flag." For example, children often accept this sentence as a description of a situation in which a cat holds a flag and a duck holds both a flag and a balloon. One proposed analysis, by Paterson, Liversedge, Rowland & Filik…
Descriptors: Sentences, Form Classes (Languages), Mandarin Chinese, Child Language
Kooijman, Valesca; Hagoort, Peter; Cutler, Anne – Infancy, 2009
Recognizing word boundaries in continuous speech requires detailed knowledge of the native language. In the first year of life, infants acquire considerable word segmentation abilities. Infants at this early stage in word segmentation rely to a large extent on the metrical pattern of their native language, at least in stress-based languages. In…
Descriptors: Cues, Infants, Indo European Languages, Language Acquisition
Shirakawa, Yoko; Iwahama, Rieko – Early Child Development and Care, 2009
This article first introduces oracy and literacy education practices in a Japanese kindergarten classroom. The authors then take up three episodes of oral interactions between five-year-old children and their teachers and examined the meaning of these oracy activities as children's building the base in the literacy world. Finally, the authors…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Young Children, Kindergarten, Teacher Role
Caprin, Claudia; Guasti, Maria Teresa – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2009
This study provides new evidence concerning the pattern of acquisition of free and bound morphemes in Italian, based on the speech of 59 children recorded through a cross-sectional method. We found that inflectional morphology is mastered before free-standing morphology. Despite the great variety of verb inflections, the analyses showed that…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Morphology (Languages), Italian, Case Studies
Nilsen, Elizabeth S.; Graham, Susan A.; Pettigrew, Tamara – Journal of Child Language, 2009
We assessed the effect of specificity of speaker information about an object on three-year-olds' word mappings. When children heard a novel label followed by specific information about an object at exposure, children subsequently mapped the label to that object at test. When children heard only specific information about an object at exposure,…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Vocabulary Development, Cognitive Mapping, Child Language
Nip, Ignatius S. B.; Green, Jordan R.; Marx, David B. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2009
This longitudinal investigation examines developmental changes in orofacial movements occurring during the early stages of communication development. The goals were to identify developmental trends in early speech motor performance and to determine how these trends differ across orofacial behaviors thought to vary in cognitive and linguistic…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Motor Development, Motor Reactions, Change
Corriveau, Kathleen; Harris, Paul L. – Developmental Science, 2009
In two experiments, children aged 3, 4 and 5 years (N = 61) were given conflicting information about the names and functions of novel objects by two informants, one a familiar teacher, the other an unfamiliar teacher. On pre-test trials, all three age groups invested more trust in the familiar teacher. They preferred to ask for information and to…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Familiarity, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Language Acquisition
Wagner, Laura; Swensen, Lauren D.; Naigles, Letitia R. – Cognitive Development, 2009
Three studies using the intermodal preferential looking paradigm examined onset of productive comprehension of tense/aspect morphology in English. When can toddlers understand these forms with novel verbs and novel events? The first study used familiar verbs and showed that 26-36-month olds correctly matched a past/perfective form ("-ed" or…
Descriptors: Verbs, Morphology (Languages), Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Toddlers
Reid, Laura – Montessori Life: A Publication of the American Montessori Society, 2009
Poetry enables teachers to connect with their students in new ways. Teachers can show students that "poetry is something people do to capture thoughts, feelings, and experience." When poetry is incorporated across the curriculum, students learn to make discoveries by looking at their environment in new ways. Poetry stands apart from storytelling…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Creative Activities, Montessori Method, Language Acquisition
Hoonhorst, Ingrid; Colin, Cecile; Markessis, Emily; Radeau, Monique; Deltenre, Paul; Serniclaes, Willy – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
By examining voice onset time (VOT) discrimination in 4- and 8-month-olds raised in a French-speaking environment, the current study addresses the question of the role played by linguistic experience in the reshaping of the initial perceptual abilities. Results showed that the language-general -30- and +30-ms VOT boundaries are better…
Descriptors: Infants, English, French, Native Speakers
Swingley, Daniel – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
Previous tests of toddlers' phonological knowledge of familiar words using word recognition tasks have examined syllable onsets but not word-final consonants (codas). However, there are good reasons to suppose that children's knowledge of coda consonants might be less complete than their knowledge of onset consonants. To test this hypothesis, the…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Tests, Word Recognition, Language Acquisition

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