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Language acquisition and socialization: Three developmental stories and their implications

Bambi B. Schieffelin, +1 more
- pp 276-320
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TLDR
In this article, a comparison of the social development of children in three societies: Anglo-American white middle class, Kaluli (Papua New Guinea), and Samoan is presented, focusing on developmental research with interests and roots in language development rather than anthropological studies of socialization.
Abstract
ABSTRACT Two claims are made concerning the interrelationship of language acquisition and socialization processes: (1)'.the process of acquiring language isdeeply -deeply affected by the process of becoming a competent member of a society; and (2) the process of becoming a competent member of society is realized to a large extent throUgh language and through acquiring knowledge of its functions, social . distribution, and interpretations in and across socially defined situations. These claims are supported with evidence, derived from a comparison of the social development of children in three societies: Anglo-American white middle class, Kaluli (Papua New Guinea), and Samoan. Specific theoretical arguMents and methodological procedures fc an ethnological approach to language development are presented, foc,3ing on developmental research with interests and roots in language development rather than anthropological studies of socialization. Five specific aspects of the ethnological model of language acquisition are addressed: (.1) the cultural organization of intentionality in language use;. (2) the integration of sociocultural knowledge and code knowledge; (3) the unevenness of language: development and the priority contexts for language, acquisition; (4) the relationship between child language and caregiver language, specifically the lack of match between them; and (5) the role' of biology in language acquisition. (MSE)

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Citations
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The Other’s Voice in the Co-Construction of Self-Reference in the Dialogic Child

TL;DR: This paper used a longitudinal video-ethnography of French parent-child interactions in family life over a period of seven years to study how the child's language development is co-constructed through interactive tellings and retellings of activities and events permeated with multiple perspectives.
Peer Review

Current Research in Psychology and Behavioral Science (CRPBS)

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Towards the development of a grammar checker and its utilization in the teaching of Modern Greek as mother tongue

TL;DR: The exploration of the standardization of grammatical errors through templates showed that errors they made in text production activities could be categorized as errors of mechanics, grammar, and usage through certain templates, which then lead to the development of a Grammar Checker for Modern Greek.
References
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Book

Thought and language

Lev Vygotsky
TL;DR: Kozulin has created a new edition of the original MIT Press translation by Eugenia Hanfmann and Gertrude Vakar that restores the work's complete text and adds materials that will help readers better understand Vygotsky's meaning and intentions as discussed by the authors.

The interpretation of cultures / Clifford Geertz

TL;DR: The interpretation of cultures clifford geertz PDF the religion of java clifford Geertz as discussed by the authors, a guide to sexual fulfillment clifford l penner PDF cliffordaposs good deeds las buenas acciones de clifford PDF operation trinity the 39 clues cahill files 1 clifford riley PDF spinors twistors and clifford algebras and quantum deformations 1st edition PDF archimedes to hawking laws of science and the great minds behind them clifford a pickover
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The Child's Learning of English Morphology

TL;DR: This paper found that children do have knowledge of morphological rules, and that this knowledge evolves from simple, regular rules to more irregular and qualified rules that are adequate fully to describe English.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Ontogenesis of Speech Acts.

TL;DR: In this paper, a speech act approach to the transition from pre-linguistic to linguistic communication is adopted in order to consider language in relation to behaviour generally and to allow for an emphasis on the USE of language rather than on its form.