What is the term used when someone acquires two or more languages at birth?
What is Simultaneous bilingualism ?
Which impairment has persistent and often significant difficulties in using and understanding language in social context?
What is ASD?
Name 2 other names for language disorders
What is language delay, language impairment, language disability, and language-learning disability?
Who are frequently the lead direct service provider for children with language disorders?
What is a SLP?
what are regional or social varieties of language that differ from one another in terms of their pronunciation, vocabulary, and grammar?
What is a dialect?
Speakers who have more than one language alternate between the two langauge
What is Code Switching?
About what % of KGs with SLI continue to exhibit SLI in 4th grade?
What is 50%
Are expressions containing both literal and figurative meanings?
What is an idiom?
In which population does –Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon occur?
What is aging/ederly?
Which dialect uses the word “Coke” to refer to a sweetened carbonated beverage
and use “sub” to refer to a type of sandwich served in a roll with meats, cheese, lettuce, tomato, etc.
What is a Southern Dialect?
_____ is a federal mandate of the individuals with Disabilities education act (IDEA), which stipulates that children with disabilities should receive their education to the maximum extent possible in the same contexts of their peers without disabilities
What is the least restrictive environment?
What % of kids in the US have disabilities of speech and language?
What is 25%
Starting around ages 8-10, children shift to getting their language input from?
What is Text?
Language that people use in nonliteral and often abstract ways is called_____
What is figurative language?
are words that are alike in spelling and pronunciation but differ in meaning (brown bear vs. bear weight)
What are homonyms?
What is the process whereby speakers of a language other than English shape pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary of English in the surrounding area?
What is Language Contact
Children with late emergence language are usuall identified by which age?
What is 2 years old?
Name a way to test Conversation/pragmatic skills
Test of Pragmatic Language (TOLD-2)- standarized test
Children Communicative Checklist, version 2- parent checklist
•Language use
–Children’s Communicative Checklist, Version 2
▪Parent-report instrument
–Test of Pragmatic Language – 2
–Conversational Skills Rating Scale
–Test of Language Competence – Expanded Edition
What is the significant language impairment in the absence of other developmental difficulty?
What is a primary language impairment?
Which dialect
–Reduce consonant clusters (“old” becomes “o l’”)
–Delete suffix –s and possessive ‘s
–Phonological inversion wherein “ask” becomes “aks”
What is African American Vernacular English (AAVE)?
____is a simplified type of language that develops when speakers who do not share a common language come into prolonged contact
What is a pidgin?
What are the two common types of TBI? Which one is more common?
CHI and OHI
CHI is more common.
Why is it important to distingh between language disorders and language differences?
Failure to differentiate correctly between a language difference and a disorder has serious implications for educational practice. For instance, consider an instance in which a 6-year-old child’s pragmatic patterns seem very different from those of her peers; perhaps she is slow to initiate conversations with other children or adults, and she never answers a direct question. During conversations, she does not use eye contact and seems unable to take turns. On the one hand, these behaviors could signify the presence of a serious language disorder; perhaps the child does not answer questions because she cannot understand them, for example. On the other hand, these same behaviors could signify a language difference. Perhaps the child comes from a home in which patterns of language use are quite different from mainstream patterns, such that children are considered rude if they initiate conversations with others, converse freely with adults, and use direct eye contact. Failure to differentiate accurately between language disorders and language differences can lead to overidentification of children from minority backgrounds for special education services as well as the opposite (failure to identify children who truly need support for a language disability).
What are the stages children who have limited English go through in a classroom?
home language stage, the nonverbal stage, telegraphic and formulaic use... etc (4 stages)
Pg 280-282
Research also suggests that school-age children’s understanding of sarcasm and irony is related to their____?
What is theory of mind?