chapter 10
chapter 10
chapter 11
chapter 11
chapters 10 or 11
100
Boys are more likely than girls to exhibit this reading disability. pg 350
What is developmental dylexia?
100
When one learns a second language and also loses fluency in one's native language. pg 330
What is Subtractive Bilingualism?
100
This is a part of language that does not change a lot because of aging. pg
What is phonology?
100
This interesting study demonstrates how stereotypes are associated with speakers of a particular language. pg 368
What is Lambert's matched guise paradigm?
100
This population is more likely to recover completely from a brain injury. pg 378
What are children?
200
These children tend to have more advanced metalinguistic awareness that monolingual children, although they may have smaller vocabularies. pg 342
What is growing up bilingual?
200
The reading and writing skills of bilingual children suggest that there is this kind of transfer. pg 354
What is cross-linguistic transfer?
200
This is a part of human communication that continues to change as we age. pg 366-367
What is Language?
200
Calling a refrigerator the "icebox" is is an example of an older person's inability to do this. pg 372
What is: have the ability to ADAPT to changes in our lexicon over time.
200
Literacy instruction that emphasizes sound-symbol correspondence dramatically improves the acquisition of this area of language. pg 341
What is phonological awareness?
300
It is said that this type of complex verbal play serves multiple socializing functions, including establishing intimate bonds. pg 339
What are purposes of teasing?
300
To identify how a riddle works by referring to the language of the riddle is an example of this. pg 395
What is metalinguistic awareness?
300
These are characteristics of different stages of Alzheimer's disease.
What are loquaciousness and muteness?
300
This kind of job specific vocabulary helps professionals communicate more effectively with one another. pg 370
What is jargon?
300
Language comprehension problems in older adults can be attributed to this. pg 373
What is hearing loss?
400
This is what we call a child's earliest awareness of the functions and forms of literacy. pg 343
What is emergent literacy?
400
This activity helps children's abilltiy to share fictional narratives. pg 332-334
What is book sharing?
400
This is what we call formal social relations that are maintained by a set of skills. pg 368
What are manners?
400
According to studies of healthy aging adults, this component of language can be more difficult to access and can result in circumlocutions. pg 371-372
What is naming?
400
This would be a good example of environmental print. pg 343
What are the letters on a stop sign?
500
Systematic, rule-governed spelling that is done by developing writers is referred to as this. pg 351-352
What is invented spelling?
500
The goal of this approach to reading centers on obtaining meaning from the text. pg 348-349
What is the Whole Language approach?
500
These three factors affect the ability to aquire a second language well. pg 371
What are having the time to do it, having a strong incentive ($$, social), having a greater bilateral organization for language?
500
Style differences between men and women, sometimes called genderlects, include these factors. pg 367
What are: word choice preferences becoming a parent using language for rapport or competition
500
As children develop, their personal narratives do as well. These are the three aspects of a narrative that change over time. pg 331-332
What are length, coherance and structure?