Infancy
Toddlerhood/ Preschool
School Aged
Miscellaneous 2
100

This age is when we typically see first words

What is 12 months?
100

These are the criteria for a first true word:

What is clear purpose, recognizable pronunciation to the adult word, and be used consistently and extends beyond the original context

100

This phonological process is still around by age five for a lot of kiddos (ex wabbit for rabbit)

What is liquid gliding 

100

These are some things that can happen to older adults with language as they age

What are forgetting of words (especially nouns), decline of speech rate, and louder speech

200

The use of what in infancy and input to infants from adults predicts better language outcomes. 

What is gesture use?

200

This skill in younger ages is correlated with reading and language skills at older ages.

What is Phonological awareness?

200

In this reading stage, children are taught to sound out words by associating sounds with corresponding letters

What is the decoding stage (Stage 1)

200

This is simplified language that develop when people from different languages and cultures come together for prolonged contact.

What is a pidgin?

300

The name of the first type of babbling we see (sounds over and over again)

What is reduplicated babbling?

300

This term is when children are able to acquire a general representation of a word with as a little as a single exposure

What is fast mapping?

300

This is the discourse we start to see with a specific name, for example "Let's do x so that y happens"


What is logical thinking?

300

This hypothesis suggests that one may have more trouble learning a new language if one is anxious or fearful. 

What is the active filter hypothesis?

400

This type of  communication is found in infancy and it is comprised of things like cries that adults have to interpret.

What is preintentional?

400

This is when a child replaces a sound produced farther back in the mouth with a sound produced farther forward

What is fronting?

400

This language is removed from the here and now

What is decontextualized language

400

 This is an example of nurture-inspired theories of language development. It involves reinforcing behaviors we want to see repeated -- or expanded through chaining.

What is behaviorism?

500

These features include high overall pitch, exaggerated pitch contours, and slower tempos

What are paralinguistic features?

500

This principle as described by Grice is something kids become of aware of in the preschool years

Cooperate principle of conversation

500

These two elements of language that kids use to parse the ongoing speech stream into understandable parts.

What are phonological awareness and gestures/shared reading 

500

The first of the four speech subsystems include:

What is respiration, phonation, resonation, articulation