Language Learning

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A01=Christine J. Howe
adequacy
Assimilation Approach
Augmented Transition Network Grammars
Author_Christine J. Howe
Category=CFDC
Category=JBSP1
Category=JMC
child language acquisition
cognitive development theory
communication strategies children
Completion Elements
cross-linguistic research
empirical studies of grammar acquisition
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Felicity Conditions
grammar learning mechanisms
hypothesis
Indirect Speech Acts
Innate Knowledge
innateness
Innateness Hypothesis
Input Mappings
items
knowledge
lexical
Lexical Items
Lexical Sequence
Main Verbs
Meaning Elements
meaning interpretation psychology
Non-literal Meaning
Noun Phrase
observational
Observationally Adequate
Part Iii
Performative Clauses
Phrase Markers
Phrase Structure Rules
priori
Priori Knowledge
Semantic Assimilation
Subject Noun Phrase
Syntactic Form Classes
Tacit Learners
Terminal Strings

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138064317
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Nov 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Originally published in 1993, the starting place for this book is the notion, current in the literature for around 30 years at that time, that children could not learn their native language without substantial innate knowledge of its grammatical structure. It is argued that the notion is as problematic for contemporary theories of development as it was for theories of the past. Accepting this, the book attempts an in-depth study of the notions credibility.

Central to the book’s argument is the conclusion that the innateness hypothesis runs into two major problems. Firstly, its proponents are too ready to treat children as embryonic linguists, concerned with the representation of sentences as an end in itself. A more realistic approach would be to regard children as communication engineers, storing sentences to optimize the production and retrieval of meaning. Secondly, even when the communication analogy is adopted, it is glibly assumed that the meanings children impute will be the ones adults intend. One of the book’s major contentions is that a careful reading of contemporary research suggests that the meanings may differ considerably.

Identifying such problems, the book considers how development should proceed, given learning along communication lines and a more plausible analysis of meaning. It makes detailed predictions about what would be anticipated given no innate knowledge of grammar. Focusing on English but giving full acknowledgement to cross-linguistic research, it concludes that the predictions are consistent with both the known timescale of learning and the established facts about children’s knowledge. Thus the book aspires to a serious challenge to the innateness hypothesis via, as its final chapter will argue, a model which is much more reassuring to psychological theory.

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