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Language Acquisition


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Language is a cognition that truly makes us human. Whereas other species do communicate with an innate ability to produce a limited number of meaningful vocalizations (e.g. bonobos), or even with partially learned systems (e.g. bird songs), there is no other species known to date that can express infinite ideas (sentences) with a limited set of symbols (speech sounds and words).

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Mar 26
2019 Amani Jammoul 2019 Amani Jammoul (Mar 26 2019 11:07AM) : This sentence is important to introduce the article and its topic. After reading it, I understand that it will be about language. It is interesting to know that humans are the only species that "can express infinite ideas with a limited set of symbols".

This ability is remarkable in itself. What makes it even more remarkable is that researchers are finding evidence for mastery of this complex skill in increasingly younger children.

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Mar 26
2019 Amani Jammoul 2019 Amani Jammoul (Mar 26 2019 11:08AM) : This gives us even more detail, telling the reader that the article will tall about the skill of mastering language for children, more specifically.

Infants as young as 12 months are reported to have sensitivity to the grammar needed to understand causative sentences (who did what to whom; e.g. the bunny pushed the frog (Rowland & Noble, 2010).

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Mar 28
Gwendolyn Orme Gwendolyn Orme (Mar 28 2019 4:39PM) : This is amazing! Many one-year-olds do not even know very many words, so it is fascinating that they have a conceptual understanding of rather advanced grammar.
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After more than 60 years of research into child language development, the mechanism that enables children to segment syllables and words out of the strings of sounds they hear, and to acquire grammar to understand and produce language is still quite an enigma.

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Mar 26
2019 Amani Jammoul 2019 Amani Jammoul (Mar 26 2019 11:10AM) : Shows that there has been a lot of research done on this subject. This allows the reader to trust what the author says, even though they mention that the way children learn language is still a mystery.
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Early Theories

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One of the earliest scientific explanations of language acquisition was provided by Skinner (1957). As one of the pioneers of behaviorism, he accounted for language development by means of environmental influence.

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Skinner argued that children learn language based on behaviorist reinforcement principles by associating words with meanings. Correct utterances are positively reinforced when the child realizes the communicative value of words and phrases.

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For example, when the child says ‘milk’ and the mother will smile and give her some as a result, the child will find this outcome rewarding, enhancing the child's language development (Ambridge & Lieven, 2011).

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Mar 26
2019 Amani Jammoul 2019 Amani Jammoul (Mar 26 2019 11:11AM) : I appreciated having this example because it helped me understand Skinner's theory.
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Universal Grammar

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However, Skinner's account was soon heavily criticized by Noam Chomsky, the world's most famous linguist to date. In the spirit of cognitive revolution in the 1950's, Chomsky argued that children will never acquire the tools needed for processing an infinite number of sentences if the language acquisition mechanism was dependent on language input alone.

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Consequently, he proposed the theory of Universal Grammar: an idea of innate, biological grammatical categories, such as a noun category and a verb category that facilitate the entire language development in children and overall language processing in adults.

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Mar 28
Gwendolyn Orme Gwendolyn Orme (Mar 28 2019 4:42PM) : This is a very interesting idea. This would imply that all children understand (at least conceptually) many grammar concepts that they will not learn until elementary school. I would be interested to know what evidence backs up this theory.
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Universal Grammar is considered to contain all the grammatical information needed to combine these categories, e.g. noun and verb, into phrases. The child’s task is just to learn the words of her language (Ambridge & Lieven).

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For example, according to the Universal Grammar account, children instinctively know how to combine a noun (e.g. a boy) and a verb (to eat) into a meaningful, correct phrase (A boy eats).

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Mar 26
2019 Amani Jammoul 2019 Amani Jammoul (Mar 26 2019 11:11AM) : Another example that helps with the understand of this theory.
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This Chomskian (1965) approach to language acquisition has inspired hundreds of scholars to investigate the nature of these assumed grammatical categories and the research is still ongoing.

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Contemporary Research

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A decade or two later some psycho linguists began to question the existence of Universal Grammar. They argued that categories like noun and verb are biologically, evolutionarily and psychologically implausible and that the field called for an account that can explain for the acquisition process without innate categories.

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Researchers started to suggest that instead of having a language-specific mechanism for language processing, children might utilise general cognitive and learning principles.

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Whereas researchers approaching the language acquisition problem from the perspective of Universal Grammar argue for early full productivity, i.e. early adult-like knowledge of language, the opposing constructivist investigators argue for a more gradual developmental process. It is suggested that children are sensitive to patterns in language which enables the acquisition process.

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An example of this gradual pattern learning is morphology acquisition. Morphemes are the smallest grammatical markers, or units, in language that alter words. In English, regular plurals are marked with an –s morpheme (e.g. dog+s).

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Similarly, English third singular verb forms (she eat+s, a boy kick+s) are marked with the –s morpheme. Children are considered to acquire their first instances of third singular forms as entire phrasal chunks (Daddy kicks, a girl eats, a dog barks) without the ability of teasing the finest grammatical components apart.

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When the child hears a sufficient number of instances of a linguistic construction (i.e. the third singular verb form), she will detect patterns across the utterances she has heard. In this case, the repeated pattern is the –s marker in this particular verb form.

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As a result of many repetitions and examples of the –s marker in different verbs, the child will acquire sophisticated knowledge that, in English, verbs must be marked with an –s morpheme in the third singular form (Ambridge & Lieven, 2011; Pine, Conti-Ramsden, Joseph, Lieven & Serratrice, 2008; Theakson & Lieven, 2005).

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Approaching language acquisition from the perspective of general cognitive processing is an economical account of how children can learn their first language without an excessive biolinguistic mechanism.

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Conclusion

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However, finding a solid answer to the problem of language acquisition is far from being over. Our current understanding of the developmental process is still immature.

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Investigators of Universal Grammar are still trying to convince that language is a task too demanding to acquire without specific innate equipment, whereas the constructivist researchers are fiercely arguing for the importance of linguistic input.

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Mar 26
2019 Amani Jammoul 2019 Amani Jammoul (Mar 26 2019 11:14AM) : This shows us that there are many different theories about language acquisition and that none have been proven to be 100% correct.
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The biggest questions, however, are yet unanswered. What is the exact process that transforms the child’s utterances into grammatically correct, adult-like speech? How much does the child need to be exposed to language to achieve the adult-like state?

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Mar 26
2019 Amani Jammoul 2019 Amani Jammoul (Mar 26 2019 11:16AM) : Not only does the author bring up questions that are unanswered, she also leaved the reader with things to think about.
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What account can explain variation between languages and the language acquisition process in children acquiring very different languages to English? The mystery of language acquisition is granted to keep psychologists and linguists alike astonished a decade after decade.

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DMU Timestamp: March 07, 2019 02:52

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Mar 26
2019 Amani Jammoul 2019 Amani Jammoul (Mar 26 2019 11:17AM) : I appreciate how the author included different theories about their evolution. I also liked how she talked about what different scientists are thinking and what they are trying to prove. more

She wasn’t biased towards one or the other. She gave the audience information about both sides.

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Mar 26
2019 Amani Jammoul 2019 Amani Jammoul (Mar 26 2019 11:19AM) : The author also ends the article will questions to think about. I think this was a great way to end it because it leaves the reader wanting to learn more and keep track of their researches. more

The author also gives the reader the tools they need to know about different theories, and then gives them the opportunity to come up with their own ideas about how children really acquire languages.

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