Word formation. Major and minor ways of word formation content introduction


THE RATE OF NEW-WORD LEARNING IN CHILDREN



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2.2 THE RATE OF NEW-WORD LEARNING IN CHILDREN
The process of learning the words of a language is referred to as Vocabulary Acquisition. As discussed below, the ways in which young children acquire the vocabulary of a native language differ from the ways in which older children and adults acquire the vocabulary of a second language.
 MEANS OF LANGUAGE ACQUISITION

  • Language Acquisition

  • Active Vocabulary and Passive Vocabulary

  • Annotation

  • Context Clues

  • English as a Second Language (ESL)

  • Lexical Competence

  • Lexicon

  • Listening and Speech

  • Overgeneralization

  • Poverty of the Stimulus

  • Reading and Writing

  • World Knowledge

The rate of new-word learning is not constant but ever increasing. Thus between the ages of 1 and 2 years, most children will learn less than one word a day whilst a 17-year-old will learn about 10,000 new words per year, mostly from reading. The theoretical implication is that there is no need to posit a qualitative change in learning or a specialized word-learning system to account for the 'remarkable' rate at which young children learn words; one could even argue that, given the number of new words to which they are exposed daily, infants' word learning is remarkably slow."
THE VOCABULARY SPURT
At some point, most children manifest a vocabulary spurt, where the rate of acquisition of new words increases suddenly and markedly. From then until about six years old, the average rate of acquisition is estimated to be five or more words a day. Many of the new words are verbs and adjectives, which gradually come to assume a larger proportion of the child's vocabulary. The vocabulary acquired during this period partly reflects frequency and relevance to the child's environment. Basic level terms are acquired first, possibly reflecting a bias towards such terms in child-directed speech. . .
Children appear to need minimal exposure to a new word form (sometimes just a single occurrence) before they assign some kind of meaning to it; this process of rapid mapping appears to help them to consolidate the form in their memory. In the early states, mapping is exclusively from form to meaning; but it later also takes place from meaning to form, as children coin words to fill gaps in their vocabulary.


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