Thursday, 22 September 2016

Child Language Development




Theory;

  • Dr. Deb Roy filmed his son for 3 years; he found that at the age of 2 his son was learning around 10 new words a day. (No one else has done this experiment because of its expensive). 


  • Jean Berko Gleason developed the “Wug” test in 1955 where she asked children questions where they had to fill in the blanks of nonsense things e.g. ‘this is a Wug, now there are two "____"


Language:
How we learn to speak- imitation and reinforcement from primary caregivers, having interactions with others though play and other contexts (nurture), or are we just born with language already in us? (nature)
Fox P2 (part of our DNA which is ‘in charge’ of language).

Language development




  • 7,000 languages in the world and it started around 50,000 years ago.
  • At around 2 years old a child starts to speak. 
  • There is a window for language development which closes at early puberty.
  •  Dr. Deb Roy filmed his son for 3 years; he found that at the age of 2 his son was learning around 10 new words a day. (No one else has done this experiment because of its expensive). 
  • Stephen pinker says that children say things that they haven’t heard before (nature).
  • Jean Berko Gleason developed the “Wug” test in 1955 where she asked children questions where they had to fill in the blanks of nonsense things e.g. ‘this is a Wug, now there are two "____"
  • Deaf children exposed to sign language show the same stages of language acquisition as do hearing children exposed to spoken language.
  • If a person develops their language after puberty they will never fully acquire their language.
  •  Children at the age of 18 months will have a productive vocabulary of around 50 words.
  • A child understands more that it can speak.
  •   If you expose a baby too two languages it will lean both.



AQA English Language

Homepage: http://www.aqa.org.uk/subjects/english/as-and-a-level/english-language-7701-7702
Specifiication: http://www.aqa.org.uk/subjects/english/as-and-a-level/english-language-7701-7702/specification-at-a-glance 
Glossary: http://filestore.aqa.org.uk/resources/english/AQA-7701-7702-GLOSSARY.PDF

AQA Coursework page: http://www.aqa.org.uk/subjects/english/as-and-a-level/english-language-7701-7702/subject-content-a-level/language-in-action

Word of Mouth- Micheal Rosen

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qtnz/episodes/player

Tuesday, 14 June 2016

Poor children a year behind in language skills

Poor children a year behind in language skills
Reading to children and taking them to libraries can limit effects of disadvantage, Sutton Trust study shows
The vocabulary of children from the poorest backgrounds lags more than a year behind that of their classmates from richer homes by the time they start school, a major new study showed today.
The Sutton Trust, the charity which sponsored the research, said the divide was a "tragic indictment of modern society", showing how educational inequality starts young and leaves children from the most disadvantaged homes struggling to keep up throughout their school years.
The poorest children face multiple challenges, being less likely to be born to well-educated parents, have a regular bedtime or live with both their biological father and mother, the study found. However, it also concluded that "good parenting can triumph", with families able to limit the effects of poverty by, for example, reading to their children daily.
Researchers from Bristol and Columbia universities analysed the performance of a representative sample of 12,644 British five-year-olds in a "naming vocabulary test" during 2006 and 2007. They then produced a "developmental age" score for each child, comparing their test results to the average achieved in the study.
The gap between rich and poor children, and even between middle-income and poor, was striking. Those from the poorest 20% of homes, where household annual incomes averaged £10,300 before tax, had an average developmental age of 53.6 months. The comparable figure for those from middle-income families, on around £30,000 a year, was 64.6 months, or 11 months ahead. Children from families in the richest 20% , on around £80,000, reached a development age of 69.8, a further five months ahead. Income itself accounted for only around a third of the differences in test scores, with some 48% caused by differences in parenting between the income groups.
Reading to a child every day was found to improve performance in the test – among children in the same income group, it raised scores by around two months – while regular library visits improved performance by 2.5 months. But only 45% of children from the poorest fifth of families were read to daily at the age of three, the study found, compared to 78% among the richest fifth.
More than a third of children from the poorest fifth of families were born to parents without a single GCSE A-C grade, while four in five of the richest families had at least one parent educated to degree level.
Some two thirds of children in the poorest income group did not live with both biological parents, compared to only one in 10 in middle-income families. Sir Peter Lampl, chairman of the Sutton Trust, said: "These findings are at once both shocking and encouraging, revealing the stark educational disadvantage experienced by children from poorer homes before they have even stepped into the school classroom, but also the potential for good parenting to overcome some of the negative impacts that poverty can have on children's early development."
The trust is now urging the government to abandon its plans to increase the amount of free nursery education it offers to all three-and-four-year-olds from 12.5 hours to 15 hours a week this year. Instead, it should provide 25 hours a week of education to the 15% most disadvantaged families. The trust also wants improvements in parenting classes for poorer families.
The children's minister, Delyth Morgan, said: "A huge amount has happened in recent years and it's a shame the Sutton Trust fails to reflect much of this. Many of its key recommendations have already been addressed. While there is much more to do, the gap between rich and poor in early years is closing, with the lowest-achieving children not only keeping pace but improving faster than the rest."

https://www.theguardian.com/education/2010/feb/15/poor-children-behind-sutton-trust


Spenders reference notes

Authors surname
Initials
First year published
Title
Place published
Publisher
Sunderland
J.S
2006
Language and Gender
Oxon
Routledge


Dale Spender researched mixed sex conversations and found that ‘men dominate the conversation, interrupt their conversational partners and are more successful at having the topics they bring up, taken up.’ I would test thing by observing mixed sex conversations in 3 different situations with varied context, one being a debate in the House of Commons, another in a busy supermarket between staff members and the other between a mother and father in their home. 

http://www.npu.edu.ua/!e-book/book/djvu/A/iif_kgpm_0415311039.pdf

Tuesday, 10 May 2016

To start with Text A (YouGov webpage) is full of lots of interactive aspects. You are able to take surveys, and most of the parts on the page move along with you, there is a line that follows you down the page which could represent the movement they plan on making with the country we live in- it could mirror their aim to move the society in a positive direction. Without the graphology throughout the website the basis of it would be really dry, due to the nature of politics and other things the information has to be fact based, which makes it less interesting to read, but with all the pictures it displays and the pop up quotes from various politicians and people who are important in the government it gives the website a fun aspect and doesn’t make it look so boring.
The power that the government has over us as a country is portrayed through the use of imperatives throughout the website, some of these being “take part” and “discover our products and services” these quotes suggest that we are customers to their commands, we do what they say and they are selling their points to us, but don’t give the audience much chance to think for themselves. But this is cloaked by the graphology that softens the harsh nature of all the commands. The verb “discover” passes the power over to their audience to seek what they would like to out of the information they give you, the nouns “products and services” come from the lexical field of retail, suggests that they are selling their opinions to us even though they hold no money value, which connotes that their ideas are powerful and costly.
Text B is an online BBC news story on the topic of the latest local election in Bristol, it reveals the results of election “labour has won..” the articles opens with a declarative giving the answer that the audience would want to find straight away which in theory would stop them from reading on, but with an article online the amount of people who open their article is what is counted not how long people stay on their page for so this is where their views are counted. They would only expect


Comparison: 

Tuesday, 19 April 2016

'The solution to (nearly) everything: working less' article

Analysis: 

Headline; 'the solution to (nearly) everything' the headline has a strong sense of whiteness which portrays the tone of the coming article. For the readers this gives them an idea of the things they will read, after being hooked by the grabbing headline that doesn't reveal too much nor to little.

Strapline: 'Excessive work and pressure are status symbols. But overtime is deadly. If we worked less we'd make fewer errors, address inequality and have a better life'. This strap line is firstly conversational as the topic of how much we work (regarding our health) is quiet sensitive for some people, therefore this strap line grabs peoples attention and gets them to read on and find out more on the topic. 

Facts and quotes:

  • The western standard of living would multiply to at least four times that of 1930 within a century. By his calculations, in 2030 we’d be working just 15 hours a week.
  • In 2000, countries such as the UK and the US were already five times as wealthy as in 1930.
  •  Yet as we hurtle through the first decades of the 21st century, our biggest challenges are not too much leisure and boredom, but stress and uncertainty.
  • What does working less actually solve
  • Countries with a shorter working week have a smaller ecological footprint.
  • Overtime is deadly. Long working days lead to more errors: tired surgeons are more prone to slip-ups and soldiers who get too little shut-eye are more prone to miss targets
  • Countless studies have shown that people who work less are more satisfied with their lives. 
  • Furthermore, countries with shorter working weeks consistently top gender-equality rankings. 
  •  Older people increasingly want to continue working even after hitting pensionable age. But while thirtysomethings are drowning in work, family responsibilities and mortgages, seniors struggle to get hired, even though (some) working has proven health benefits.
Discourse marker:
In fact 
Yet 
Take climate change, 
Or, better yet 
Overtime is deadly 
Obviously 
Furthermore.