phonemes
units of sound that can change the meaning of a word
morphemes
the smallest pieces of language with meaning
example:
“un-“ (which means “not”),
“happy” (which is the main meaning), and
“-ly” (which turns it into an adverb).
prosody
how sounds are produced: pitch, intonation
language and biology
poverty of the stimulus
concept that argues that the input from the environment is not sufficient to account for the remarkable speed and success of
language acquisition
language during the first year
word segmentation ability
understanding that a sentence is a string of words and not a long word
syntactic bootstrapping
using a word’s location in a sentence to understand the
meaning (using sentence structure, or syntax)
holophrases
using a single word to convey a sentence’s worth of meaning
fast mapping
process by which children learn and remember the meaning of a new word after hearing it only a few times, often with minimal context or feedback
vocabulary spurt
rapid increase in an infant’s vocabulary (~ 18 months)
common errors in infant’s speech:
overextension , underextension
telegraphic speech
short, concise utterances consisting of mainly content words without
grammatical markers or unnecessary words, similar to telegrams
transformational grammar
rules for turning sentences into questions or negatives
overregularization
overapplying new learned grammatic rules
mastery motivation
The drive or desire to learn, improve, and master new skills or tasks.
metalinguistic awareness
knowledge of the language as a system
fixed mindset
beliefs that one’s abilities are fixed, leading to low motivation
growth mindset
belief that one’s abilities are changeable, leading to increased motivation
factors that influence the development of a fixed or growth mindset
→ mastery goals (wanting to learn new things to improve their abilities)
→ performance goals (wanting to prove an ability)
→ involvement in self-regulated learning
→ parental support
→ school contributions (not always that good)
emergent literacy
developmental precursor of reading skills
dyslexia
learning disability that causes reading problems due to the mind understanding langege defrently
The Adolescen (some facts)
pragmatic and semantic knowledge
pragmatic: understanding how to use language in social situations
semantic: understanding the meaning of words and sentences
(thoose increase for adults)