1 language learning in early childhood preview
zone of proximal development
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Pedagogía
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zone of proximal development
(ZPD) . Vygotsky observed the importance of conversations that children have with adults and with other children and saw in these conversations the origins of both language and thought. The conversations provide the child with scaffolding , that is, a kind of supportive structure that helps them make the most of the knowledge they have and also to acquire new knowledge. Vygotsky’s view differs from Piaget’s. Piaget saw language as a symbol system that could be used to express knowledge acquired through interaction with the physical world. For Vygotsky, thought was essentially internalized speech, and speech emerged in social interaction. Vygotsky’s views have become increasingly central in research on L2 development, as we will see in Chapter 4 . Cross-cultural research Since the 1970s, researchers have studied children’s language learning environments in a great many different cultural communities. The research has focused not only on the development of language itself, but also on the ways in which the environment provides what children need for language acquisition. Between 1985 and 1997, Dan Slobin edited five volumes devoted to research on the acquisition of 28 languages, providing examples and analyses of child language and the language-learning environment from communities around the world (Slobin, 1985–1997). Then, the year 2000 saw the launch of a resource for child language researchers, which is remarkable in its scale: the Child Language Data Exchange System (CHILDES), where researchers share child language data in dozens of languages in the form of audio/video recordings and transcriptions of recorded language samples from children and their interlocutors (MacWhinney, 2000). Another recent large- scale resource on child language learning is the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventories (MB-CDIs) (Fenson et al., 2007), a database that brings together information from questionnaires and checklists completed by parents for a large number of children learning different languages. One feature of cross-cultural research on child language development is the description of child-rearing patterns. Catherine Snow (1995) and others have studied the apparent effects on language acquisition of the ways in which adults talk to and interact with young children. In middle-class North American homes, researchers observed that adults often modify the way they |
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