Yancarlos J.
Alcantara De Leon (100432345)
IDI13350
02/12/2023
FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION
Theories of first language acquisition
Everyone at some time has witnessed the remarkable ability of children to
communicate. Small babies, babble, coo, and cry, sending an extraordinary number of
messages and, of course, receiving even more messages.
The production tempo now begins to increase as more and more words are spoken
every day and more and more combinations of multiword sentences are uttered.
Behavioral Approaches
A behavioral perspective of course easily explains such exchanges as the result of an
emitted or stimulated “response” (utterance) that is immediately rewarded (reinforced),
thereby encouraging (stimulating) further linguistic attempts from the child.
Operant conditioning refers to conditioning in which the organism (in this case, a
human being) emits a response, or operant (a sentence or utterance), without necessarily
observable stimuli; that operant is maintained (learned) by reinforcement (for example, a
positive verbal or nonverbal response from another person).
Challenges to Behavioral Approaches
Skinner’s theories attracted a number of critics, not the least among them Chomsky
(1959), who penned a highly critical review of Verbal Behavior. Some years later, however,
MacCorquodale (1970) published a reply to Chomsky’s review in which he eloquently
defended Skinner’s points of view. The controversy raged on.
In an attempt to broaden the base of behavioral theory, some psychologists proposed
modified theoretical positions. One of these positions was mediation theory, ( Osgood, 1953 ,
1957) in which meaning was accounted for by the claim that the linguistic stimulus (a word
or sentence) elicits a “mediating” response that is covert and invisible, acting within the
learner.
The Nativist Approach
The term nativist is derived from the fundamental assertion that language acquisition
is innately determined, that we are born with a genetic capacity that predisposes us to a
systematic perception of language around us, resulting in the construction of an internalized
system of language.
More recently, researchers in the nativist tradition continued this line of inquiry
through a genre of child language acquisition research that focuses on what has come to be
known as Universal Grammar ( Cook, 1993 ; Mitchell & Myles, 1998 ; Gass & Selinker,
2001 ; White, 2003 , 2012; Bhatia & Ritchie, 2009 ).
Nativist studies of child language acquisition were free to construct hypothetical
grammars (that is, descriptions of linguistic systems) of child language, although such
grammars were still solidly based on empirical data. Linguists began to examine child
language from early one-, two-, and three-word forms of “telegraphese” (like “allgone milk”
and “baby go boom” mentioned earlier) to the complex language of five- to ten-year-olds.
Borrowing one tenet of structural and behavioral paradigms, they approached the data with
few preconceived notions about what the child’s language ought to be, and probed the data
for internally consistent systems, in much the same way that a linguist describes a language in
the “field.”
Challenges to Nativist Approaches
A “messier but more fruitful picture” ( Spolsky, 1989 , p. 149 ) was provided by what
has come to be known as the parallel distributed processing (PDP) model, based on the notion
that information is processed simultaneously at several levels of attention.
Closely related to the PDP concept is a branch of psycholinguistic inquiry called
connectionism ( Rumelhart & McClelland, 1986 ), in which neurons in the brain are said to
form multiple connections: each of the 100 billion nerve cells in the brain may be linked to
thousands of its counterparts. In this approach, experience leads to learning by strengthening
particular connections—sometimes at the expense of weakening others.
Cognition and Language Development
Lois Bloom (1971) cogently illustrated the first issue in her criticism of pivot
grammar when she pointed out that the relationships in which words occur in telegraphic
utterances are only superficially similar.
Social Interaction and Language Development
In recent years, it has become quite clear that language development is intertwined,
not just with cognition and memory, but also with social and functional acquisition. Holzman
(1984), Berko-Gleason, (1988), and Lock (1991) all looked at the interaction between the
child’s language acquisition and the learning of how social systems operate in human
behavior.
ISSUES IN FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION
Intertwining all the above perspectives are issues, questions, and controversies that
carry over into quite a number of domains of inquiry in linguistics and psychology. A sketch
of these issues will lay the groundwork for understanding some of the variables surrounding
SLA that will be taken up in subsequent chapters.
Competence and Performance
Competence refers to one’s underlying knowledge of a system, event, or fact. It is the
nonobservable ability to do something—to perform something. Performance is the overtly
observable and concrete manifestation, or realization, of competence. It is the actual doing of
something: walking, singing, dancing, speaking. The competence–performance distinction is
exemplified in all walks of life. In businesses, workers are expected to perform their jobs
“competently,” that is, to exhibit skills that match their expected competence. In educational
circles we have assumed that children possess certain competence in given areas (or
standards) and that this competence can be measured by elicited samples of performance
called tests and examinations.
Comprehension and Production
Comprehension (listening, reading) must not be equated with competence, nor should
production (speaking, writing) be thought of only as performance. Human beings have the
competence (the internal unobservable mental and physical “wiring”) both to understand and
to produce language. We also perform acts of listening and reading just as surely as we
perform acts of speaking and writing. Don’t let the beginnings of the two pairs of words
confuse you!
The competence–performance model has not met with universal acceptance. Major
criticisms focus on the notion that competence, as defined by Chomsky, consists of the
abilities of an idealized hearer-speaker, devoid of any so-called performance variables.
Stubbs (1996), reviewing the issue, asserted that the only option for linguists is to study
language in use. Tarone (1988) pointed out that a child’s (or adult’s) slips, hesitations, and
self-corrections are potentially connected to what she calls heterogeneous competence—
abilities that are in the process of being formed.
Nature or Nurture?
Nativists contend that a child is born with an innate knowledge of or predisposition
toward language, and that this innate property (the LAD or UG) is universal in all human
beings ( Pinker, 2007 ). The innateness hypothesis was a possible resolution of the
contradiction between the behavioral notion that language is a set of habits that can be
acquired by a process of conditioning and the fact that such conditioning is much too slow
and inefficient a process to account for the acquisition of a phenomenon as complex as
language.
Principles are invariable characteristics of human language that appear to apply to all
languages universally, such as those listed above. Vivian Cook (1997, pp. 250 – 251 ) offered
a simple analogy: Rules of the road in driving universally require the driver to keep to one
side of the road; this is a principle. But in some countries you must keep to the left (e.g., the
United Kingdom, Japan) and in others keep to the right (e.g., the United States, Taiwan); the
latter is a parameter.
So, parameters vary across languages. Lydia White (2003, p. 9 ) noted that “UG
includes [rules] with a limited number of built-in options ( settings or values), which allow
for cross-linguistic variation. Such [rules] are known as parameters.” If, for example, all
languages adhere to the principle of assigning meaning to word order, then depending on the
specific language in question, variations in word order (e.g., subject-verb-object; subject-
object-verb, etc.) will apply. Or, as Cook and Newson (1996) demonstrated, all languages
have “head parameter” constraints in phrases.
In general, I was able to learn more about Theories of first language acquisition.
Also I was able to learn more about A behavioral perspective of course easily explains such
exchanges as the result of an emitted or stimulated “response” (utterance) that is immediately
rewarded (reinforced), thereby encouraging (stimulating) further linguistic attempts from the
child.
I also was able to learn that The term nativist is derived from the fundamental
assertion that language acquisition is innately determined, that we are born with a genetic
capacity that predisposes us to a systematic perception of language around us, resulting in the
construction of an internalized system of language.
Also i could learn about Competence refers to one’s underlying knowledge of a
system, event, or fact. It is the nonobservable ability to do something—to perform something.
Performance is the overtly observable and concrete manifestation, or realization, of
competence. It is the actual doing of something: walking, singing, dancing, speaking. The
competence–performance distinction is exemplified in all walks of life. In businesses,
workers are expected to perform their jobs “competently,” that is, to exhibit skills that match
their expected competence. In educational circles we have assumed that children possess
certain competence in given areas (or standards) and that this competence can be measured
by elicited samples of performance called tests and examinations.
finally that The competence–performance model has not met with universal
acceptance. Major criticisms focus on the notion that competence, as defined by Chomsky,
consists of the abilities of an idealized hearer-speaker, devoid of any so-called performance
variables.
Refenreces
Brown, H. Douglas, 1941- Principles of Language Learning and Teaching/ H.
Douglas Brown. Sixth Edition.