Cad Group1 Report
Cad Group1 Report
Cad Group1 Report
LITERACY
DEVELOPMENT IN
CHILDREN AND
ADOLESCENTS
Contents:
Understanding the natural history and the
theories of language development (Innatist,
Cognitivist, Social Contextual, Hallmarks,
Bilingualism)
Familiarizing learner’s emergent word
recognition and developmentof their
reading comprehension.
Comparing Aphasia and Dyslexia
NATURAL HISTORY OF
LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT
Certain Language by LASHLEY(BEAN, 1932)
“presents in the most
striking form of integrative
functions that are
characteristics of the
cerebral cortex and that
reach their highest
development in human
thought processes,”
DEVELOPMENT OF LANGUAGE
Osgood (1953)
-”brutishly materialistic view’
BABY’S CRY
UMBILICAL CORD OXYGEN CARBON DIOXIDE BLOOD
First,
improve their ability to comprehend
what others are saying to them.
VOCABULARY
SENTENCES
There are two lines of evidence that have served to explain the most
important reasons for the facts that today’s young children speak better
than the children, age for age, did in the past.
CONTEXT OF SPEECH
SOCIALIZED
SPEECH
Amount of talking by HURLOCK, 1982
"chatter-box age"
INTELLIGENCE
TYPE OF DISCIPLINE ORDINAL POSITION
FAMILY SIZE SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS
RACIAL STATUS BILINGUALISM
Trial and error
Conditioned- learning
response learning
Rote learning
Functions of words
LEARNING WORDS
THEORIES OF
LANGUAGE
DEVELOPMENT
INNATIST THEORY
Noam Chomsky (1965)
TRANSFORMATIONAL
GRAMMAR
DEEP SURFACE
STRUCTURE STRUCTURE
COGNITIVIST THEORY
PIAGET, (1968)
SOCIAL CONTEXTUAL THEORY
VYGOTSKY, (1962, 1978)
• PHONOLOGY
• SYNTAX
• SEMANTICS
• PRAGMANTICS
BILINGUALISM
Ianco-Worrell, (1972)
Benefits of Bilingualism
(or more generally: • Economic
Multilingualism) is the
phenomenon of speaking • Cultural values
and understanding two or • Occupational Stability
more languages.
• Education
BILINGUAL EDUCATION
by Nieto, (1996)
Approaches to
Bilingual
Education
1. Transitional Bilingual
Transition
2. Maintenance
Bilingual Education
3. Two-way Bilingual Education
4. Immersion Bilingual Education
5. Metalinguistic Awareness
6. Language Immersion
7. Bilingualism and
Personality
Emergent Literacy
Emergent Literacy
Period
From birth to 5 to 6
years old.
Literacy Socialization
• Literacy Artifacts
• Literacy Events
• The types of knowledge children
given from literacy experience
Development of Word
Recognition Skills
TRANSITION STAGE
ALPHABETIC STAGE
3. Analytical reading
4. Comparative reading
EARLY LANGUAGE STIMULATION
7. The reader’s response to the text also becomes more general, more
inferential, more critical, and more constructive with successive stages.
SIBERIA
APHASIA
DYSARTHRIA or APRAXIA OF SPEECH