LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT
Language
refers to a form of communication in which we learn to use complex rules to
form and manipulate symbols (words or gestures) that are to generate an endless
number meaningful sentences. The growth and development in speech, vocabulary,
length of responses are some of the important aspects of language development.
The vocabulary of children in the beginning is too limited. There is continuous
increase in the size of one’s vocabulary during childhood. Later on, as a
result of pressure of needs and learning, the vocabulary goes on developing.
Meaning and significance
The
major characteristics that distinguish between human beings from animals is
their ability to use language. Speech is the most important form of
communication. Communication has six forms: 1. Speech 2. Facial and bodily movements 3. Touch 4. Sign language used by the deaf 5. Arts such as music, dance, painting etc.
and 6. Written symbols of words.
Sequence of Language Development:
1. At
birth language is particularly absent
2. Around
4 weeks - small throaty sounds are noticed
3. Around
16 weeks – cry, smile, cooing etc.
4. Around
28 weeks – babbling stage begins
5. Around
40 weeks – try to imitate others sound
6. Around
52 weeks – says two or more words
7. Around
18 months – baby combines words to from basic sentences
8. Around
24 months – baby uses simple phrases and understands simple directions
9. Around
36 months – Talks in sentences, answer simple questions
10. Around
4 years – use conjunctions and prepositions
11.
Around 5 years – speaks without infantile
articulations
Theories of Language Development
In
the 1950’s two theories of language acquisition were developed that took
opposing views: behaviourism (language develops as a result of environmental
influences) and nativism (language development is inborn and innate). Of the
different views on language development, those proposed by Chomsky and Vygotsky
calls for special attention.
CHOMSKY’S
VIEW ON LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT
Noam
Chomsky, the great twentieth century American Linguistic, posited that children
are born with a powerful language acquisition device (LAD) which represents a knowledge of universal grammar or grammar of all human languages. The LAD
processes the linguistic input or the language to which a child is exposed and
intelligently tests several hypothesis about the nature of the input to quickly
and efficiently come up with the knowledge of the rules or grammar of that
language.
According
to Chomsky, language is being constructed. The primary form of language is
stored in human brain. What is to be done is to enable the child to make use of
that and acquire knowledge. The main function of language is communication of
ideas. We perceive language as the ability to comprehend and speak ideas.
Chomsky’s Theoretical Constructs
The
important theoretical constructs postulated by Chomsky for explaining his views
on linguistic development in children are the following:
1.
Language Acquisition Device: [LAD] It is a
neural system of the brain hypothesized to permit understanding of language. According
to Chomsky all human beings are born with an innate predisposition (latent
tendency) to learn a language fluently, and this predisposition is encased in
our biological make-up. This innate, language ability that facilitate the
acquisition of language in man is called the Language Acquisition Device. The
LAD processes and shapes the primary linguistic data received by the child from
the environment and enables him to acquire ideas about the rules of language as
applied to one’s own language without being aware of.
2. Universal Grammar: Chomsky held that all languages of the
world have the same basic underlying grammatic structure, and the specific
languages have rules that transform these underlying structures into the
specific patterns found in given languages. According to Chomsky, all languages
have the same basic underlying grammatic structures and principles, which he
called Universal Grammar, i.e. all languages of the world share similar
characteristics of using nouns, verbs, pronouns, though not necessarily in a
similar order.
3. Generative Grammar: Chomsky defined generative grammar as a
finite (limited) set of rules operating
on a finite vocabulary to generate an infinite number of acceptable grammatical
sentences and no un-acceptable ones. So, from a small number of words, using
‘some rules’, the child can create a vast number of words or sentences.
Language Acquisition
Through Universal Grammar
According
to Chomsky children are born with a special biological brain mechanism to learn
languages, which he called Language Acquisition Device. Chomsky opined that despite many superficial
differences found in the surface structure of different languages of the world,
they have the same basic underlying grammatic structures and principles, which
he called Universal Grammar, i.e. all languages of the world share similar
characteristics of using nouns, verbs, pronouns, though not necessarily in a
similar order.
All children go through a critical learning
period in the first three years of their life during which the child’s LAD is
active. It accepts the primary linguistic data from the environment as input,
processes and transforms it with the help of the Universal Grammar structures,
and generate as an output grammar of the language from which the data have been
drawn. In this process, the infant acts
as a little linguist trying to figure out the set of abstract rules which
generate the sentences that are heard. Chomsky maintains that the extraction of
these rules is possible only if the child already knows their basic nature, i.e. he has
a LAD which contains knowledge of universal grammar.
During
language acquisition, the universal grammar develops into a particular grammar
of the language that the child is exposed to, i.e. his native language. The
children then extracts and acquires the rules of that language.
Chomsky’s View of Language Acquisition
According
to Chomsky, language acquisition is not a process of imitation, but it is a
creative process that involves the creation and reliance on a rule system. For
example, the English children go through a period in which they produce past tense
forms such as ‘goed’ (past tense of go)
and ‘comed’ (past tense of come) rather than went and came. Such forms are very
infrequent in the children’s input. Here the child incorrectly applies the
regular rules of past tense formation. This indicate that language acquisition
involves the development of a rule-based system, a defining feature of
generative grammar.
Normal
language development involves a number of well defined stages. The basic
lexical (Dictionary word) and
grammatical properties are all acquired within the first three years. At 6-8 months children start to babble, at
10-12 months they speak their first words and at 20-24 months they begin to put
words together. When they are between 2 and 3 years they produce simple
sentences with infinite verbal forms.
VYGOTSKY’S VIEW ON LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT
Lev Vygotsky was born in 1896. He studied at
the University of Moscow and though he received a degree in law, he became a
teacher of literature. Vygotsky’s interest in language and literature blended
with his interest in psychology and lead him to theorize about language /
cognitive development in children. His theory is known as Social
Constructivism. He hypothesized that development of inner speech in children
developed in the same manner as all other mental processes.
According to Vygotsky language
develops not from the individual to the social, but from the social to the
individual. The earliest speech of the child is essentially social. He argues
that language in the form of private speech guides cognitive development. If
we closely observe children engaged in play it can be noted that they often
talk themselves as they play – Psychologists call this phenomenon as Private
speech. Through social interaction and
with the help of the society the child acquire knowledge and new ways and
means of behaviour. Thus the culture of the society acted as an
important instrument of the language development. Culture is reflected in
language; as language is an instrument to transmit culture form one
generation to the other.
STAGES OF LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT
Primitive
stage:
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