Preschool Age Language
Preschool Age Literacy
Younger School Age Language
Older School Age Cognition
Older School Age Language
100

a child’s ability to understand someone else’s mental state

theory of mind

100

What does literacy development begin?

in infancy!!!!! (Newman, Ratner, Juszcyk, & Juszcyk, 2006)

100

By what age are children presenting with expressive vocabulary that expands to 2,600 words and receptive vocabulary to 24,000 words.

6-8 years of age

100

Piaget (1954) considers adolescents to be in the _________________ stage when their cognitive skills allow them to understand more abstract concepts (e.g., emotions, figurative language)

Formal operations stage
100

In older school-age kids, a lot of vocabulary is learned when children are actually not directly taught these words. This is called...

incidental/implicit learning  (Akhtar, Jipson, & Callanan, 2001)

200

All children present with speech production errors that result in a simplification of the target word. These speech sound patterns of error are called...

phonological processes

200

Metalinguistic awareness refers to the ability to use language to think/talk about language.

True or false: Learning another language (bilingualism) actually promotes metalinguistic awareness.

True

200

An expression that cannot be understood just from the meaning of its separate words, such as "walking on eggshells"

idiom

200

Which type of discourse is important for older school age kids, and is present in nonfiction articles, informational books, instruction manuals, and textbooks (e.g., history, anatomy, mathematics, politics, or science)?

expository discourse

200

Narratives for older school-age children contain an underlying structure that includes the following elements: settings, initiating events, internal responses, and a plan to solve the problem.

Think of the monkey narrative that was shown in class. A problem or an event, such as a surprise party, is an example of which element?

initiating event (Stein & Glenn, 1979)

300

a child’s ability to map a concept onto the symbol (word) after minimal exposure to a word

fast mapping

300

By age 3, children are starting to think and communicate about their world in more complex ways. They're learning to communicate about people, objects, and events that are not actually present. This is known as ______ language.

decontextualized

300

Figurative expressions that express a thought or truth (e.g., Practice makes perfect); difficult to learn, sometimes rooted in cultural traditions

proverbs

300

A cognitive skill that is essential for school-age kids when presented with illogical beliefs or ideas; involves the analysis of the content of a spoken or written text for accuracy and logic 

critical thinking and/or verbal reasoning (Nippold, Frantz-Kaspar, Cramond, Kirk, Hayward-Mayhew, & MacKinnon, 2014)

300

Topic-centered narratives are organized around a single object or event and narratives have a clear beginning, middle, and end. Which type of narrative is organized as a series of anecdotes or episodes and narratives do not adhere to a linear pattern but may reflect other structural and thematic patterns?

Topic-associated narratives

400

Syntax develops quickly in preschool-age children. Noun phrases and verb phrases develop in stages. In both noun phrases and verb phrase development, the first stage is usually made up of only 2-word utterances. True or false?

True
400

Story grammar elements in preschool age children include: characters, setting, solution, and a plot. What's missing?

problem

400

This fatty substance forms a protective sheath around synapses, allowing signals in the brain to travel faster and more efficiently; but overstimulation, such as during excessive screen use in early childhood, can slow its growth and hinder language learning

what is... myelin
400

The four types of metalinguistic knowledge that characterize the school-age child’s language development (Gleason & Ratner, 2017) include phonological awareness, semantic awareness, pragmatic awareness, and... ?

syntactic awareness

400

Adolescents using language by adjusting to listeners' characteristics and needs, trying to change a listener's opinion, and anticipating the needs of the listeners' responses to counterarguments is an example of which type of discourse?

persuasive discourse

500

A preschool-age child who uses language to tell stories and to role-play, according to Halliday (1975) would be using which communicative function?

imaginative

500

By age 4y, children learn that print is organized from left to right, has it's own rules and conventions, for example that a grocery list is organized differently than a storybook. This is called...

print awareness

500

By age 6y, children understand SIMPLE words or phrase that describes a person, object, or event by referring to a similar characteristic. These are known as... 

metaphors

500

Abstract thought in adolescents focuses a lot on moral, philosophical, ethical, social, and political issues that require theoretical and abstract reasoning. One example of this is when these kids are asked to form conclusions based on a couple of otherwise true statements. For example, if A=B, and B=C, then A=?


deductive reasoning

500

Growth in the domain of morphosyntax for children in the middle to late school-age years and adolescence is characterized by an increase in a) ____ and b) ____

length and complexity

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