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Child's talk : learning to use language / Jerome Bruner, with the assistance of Rita Watson.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : W.W. Norton, [1983]Copyright date: ©1983Edition: First editionDescription: 144 pages : illustrations ; 19 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0393017532
  • 9780393017533
  • 0393953459
  • 9780393953459
Other title:
  • Learning to use language
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 401.9 19
LOC classification:
  • P118 .B695 1983
Contents:
Introduction -- From communicating to talking -- Play, games, and language -- The growth of reference -- The development of request -- Learning how to talk.
Summary: How does a child acquire language, and what may facilitate this learning? To carry out his investigations, Bruner went to the child's own setting for learning rather than observing children in a contrived video laboratory. For Bruner, language is learned by using it. Central to its use are what he calls "formats," scriptlike interactions between mother and child, in short, play and games. What goes on in games as rudimentary as peekaboo or hide and seek can tell us much about language acquisition. But what aids the aspirant speaker in his attempt to use language? To answer this, the author postulates the existence of a Language Acquisition Support System that frames the interactions between adult and child in such a way as to allow the child to master the basic but necessary steps in learning to talk. It underlies the fine tuning involved in orderly language learning and allows the child to proceed from learning how to refer to objects to learning to make a request of another human being. - Back cover.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction -- From communicating to talking -- Play, games, and language -- The growth of reference -- The development of request -- Learning how to talk.

How does a child acquire language, and what may facilitate this learning? To carry out his investigations, Bruner went to the child's own setting for learning rather than observing children in a contrived video laboratory. For Bruner, language is learned by using it. Central to its use are what he calls "formats," scriptlike interactions between mother and child, in short, play and games. What goes on in games as rudimentary as peekaboo or hide and seek can tell us much about language acquisition. But what aids the aspirant speaker in his attempt to use language? To answer this, the author postulates the existence of a Language Acquisition Support System that frames the interactions between adult and child in such a way as to allow the child to master the basic but necessary steps in learning to talk. It underlies the fine tuning involved in orderly language learning and allows the child to proceed from learning how to refer to objects to learning to make a request of another human being. - Back cover.

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