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Semantic Development
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Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Semantic Development

Page 2: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

What is Semantic Development?

• The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex hierarchical network of associated meanings.

Page 3: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Semantic Development

Important Concepts• Word-arbitrary label• Referent-the object,

entity, or concept to which a word refers

• Meaning-mental construct, conceptual aspect that permits us to comprehend

Page 4: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Semantic Development

• Lexicon– Mental storehouse of

information about words and morphemes.

Page 5: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Stages of Development of Communicative Functions

• Perlocutionary Stage–(8-10 months of age)

early forms of sounds and behaviors to which an adult can infer communicative intent;

the child demonstrates behaviors for successful communication such

Page 6: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Stages of Development of Communicative Functions

• Illocutionary Stage – (around 10 months until the time they speak their first word); the child demonstrates intent to communicate;

• this stage is characterized by:

Page 7: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Stages of Development of Communicative Functions

• Locutionary Stage – (time of first words) (around 12 months)

using first words; with the first ten or so words they display unstable word use (new words come and go); then the child …

Page 8: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

When is it “the first word”?

• It may occur as early as 8 months or as late as 16 months

• Characteristics of true words– Phonetic consistency

– Semantic coherence

– Symbolic autonomy

Page 9: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Characteristics of Children’s Early Use of Words

• Easier words to say are more likely to be included in early productive vocabularies

• Vocabularies are from a variety of grammatical classes

• Nouns are favored over verbs in acquisition of the English language because verbs are more linguistically complex

Page 10: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Characteristics of Children’s Early Use of Words (con’t)

• Overextensions-occur when a child uses a word in a context or manner that is inconsistent with, but in some way related to, the adult meaning of the word

• Invented words-children use their own “made-up words”

Page 11: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

First 50 Words (Adapted from Owens, 2001)

Grammatical Function

Percentage of Vocabulary

Examples

Nominals: General & Specific 51

14

Milk, dog, car

Mama,dada, pet names

Action Words 14 Give, do, bye-bye, up

Modifiers 9 Mine, no, dirty

Personal-social 9 No, please

Functional 4 This, for

Page 12: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

What do first words sound like?

• Front consonants are the most common sounds used in early words.– /p, b, d, t, m, n/

Page 13: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

How fast does the first lexicon grow?

• 12 to 18 months of age 50

• 18 to 24 months of age 200-300

• 3 years of age 900-1000

• 5 years of age 2,100-2,200

This is expressive vocabulary!!

Page 14: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Emergent Word Learning

• 12-18 months of age a child learns words through salience and perception. They pay more attention to things they think are interesting or calling their attention.

For instance, the child will look at a moving object. The mom labels an object and the child assumes it is the object the child is interested in.

Page 15: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Emergent Word Learning

• 18-24 months of age a child begins learning words using social cues as well. They look at mom or the caregiver to see what they are looking at when they hear a label. They pay much more attention to the adult’s gesture and eye gaze.

Page 16: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Expressive vs. Receptive Vocabulary

• Elliot (1981) “Both comprehension and production of linguistic structure undergo development, probably at different rates.”

• Nakazima (1962) “A child can perceive speech sounds very early. Intonational patterns are discriminated at about 8 months.”

Page 17: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Expressive vs. Receptive

• Benedict (1979) proposed that comprehension precedes production. Based on one of his studies, it shows that children can understand approximately 50 words at the time they are producing about 10 words.

Page 18: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Expressive vs. Receptive

• If during the 2nd year of life a child shows such a drastic increase in vocabulary usage, it is assumed that the child is using words they already understand. Bloom (1974) proposed that a child will use known words, that the nonlinguistic context is a comprehension and use aid.

Page 19: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Theoretical Perspectives on Semantic Development

1. Learning Theory-learn words through associative learning.

2. Developmental Theories- consider semantic development within the wider context of the child’s unfolding social, cognitive and linguistic skills.

3. Fast Mapping-Children’s ability to form an initial hypothesis about a word’s meaning very quickly, after hearing it only once or twice

Page 20: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Lexical Principles of Fast Mapping

Default assumptions that children may use as working hypothesis when mapping a word– Words refer to objects– Words refer to whole objects– New words can be extended to other members of the

same category– Each object can have only one name– New words refer to categories that do not already have

a name– No two words have exactly the same meaning

Page 21: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Slow Mapping

• The principle of enriching your semantic representations of words already fast-mapped into your lexicon.

Page 22: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Later Semantic Developmentkindergarten and beyond

A. Acquisition of Complex Concepts: – Kinship terms

– Spatial words

– Color terms

– Deictic terms – (pointer words)(this, that, I, you, here)

Page 23: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Later Semantic Development

• According to Owens (2008) a preschooler can make valuable conversational contributions, but by kindergarten a child can uphold their end of a conversation.

Page 24: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Later Semantic Development

• A preschooler advances from 1- to 2- to

multi-word sentences, whereas from kindergarten and beyond a person will become more adept at vocabulary use, concept use, narrative discourse, etc. Beyond preschool we learn to modify our language, to interact using our language – we become more flexible with our language.

Page 25: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Later Semantic Development

B. Metalinguistic Awareness- The ability to use language to think about and to analyze language.– Example: using language as an object of play

vs. using language for communication

Page 26: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Later Semantic Development

Metalinguistic Development– Is the knowledge of

the nature of language as an object.

– First, children learn that words are separable from their referents.

– Rhyming is one of the earliest metalinguistic skills acquired by children.

Page 27: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Later Semantic Development

Metalinguistic Development (con’t)– Children learn that they can manipulate words, reflect

on the properties of words (long vs. short) and objects separately.

– Children continue to develop metalinguistic skills during the school years.

Page 28: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Later Semantic Development

C. Phonological Awareness– The ability to consciously recognize and

manipulate units of the speech stream– Is both important for and influenced by

learning to read

Page 29: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Later Semantic Development

D. Humor-Children play with semantic elements in

syntactic structures for humorous effect from an early age

-Puns and riddles are a favorite in middle elementary school years

-By age nine, children understand the humor in riddles, but can also explain its source

Page 30: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Later Semantic Development

E. Metaphor and Irony– Metaphor- figure of speech in which one thing

is called by the name of another to indicate the similarities between them

– Irony-Using words to convey the opposite of their literal meaning

Page 31: Semantic Development. What is Semantic Development? The acquisition of words and their many meanings; the development of word knowledge into a complex.

Later Semantic Development

F. Word Definitions– During the early school years children’s

definitions are concrete, personal and incidental

– Through the elementary years, these definitions are replaced by abstract types of responses: synonyms, explanations, and specifications of categorical relationships