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Language acquisition - Nativist theories

Language acquisition - Nativist theories: Encyclopedia II - Language acquisition - Nativist theories

Linguistic theories hold that children learn through their natural ability to organize the laws of language, but cannot fully utilize this talent without the presence of other humans. This does not mean, however, that the child requires formal teaching of any sort. Chomsky claims that children are born with a hard-wired language acquisition device (LAD) in their brains. They are born with the major principles of language in place, but with many parameters to set (such as whether sentences in the language(s) they are to acquire must ha ...

See also:

Language acquisition, Language acquisition - Nativist theories, Language acquisition - Non-nativist theories, Language acquisition - The Critical Period Hypothesis, Language acquisition - Additional arguments for nativism, Language acquisition - Bibliography

Language acquisition, Language acquisition - Additional arguments for nativism, Language acquisition - Bibliography, Language acquisition - Nativist theories, Language acquisition - Non-nativist theories, Language acquisition - The Critical Period Hypothesis, babbling, fis phenomenon, ILR scale (levels of language proficiency), Jean Berko Gleason, Language, Origin of language, Second language acquisition, Steven Pinker, Wug Test

Language acquisition: Encyclopedia II - Language acquisition - Nativist theories



Language acquisition - Nativist theories

Linguistic theories hold that children learn through their natural ability to organize the laws of language, but cannot fully utilize this talent without the presence of other humans. This does not mean, however, that the child requires formal teaching of any sort. Chomsky claims that children are born with a hard-wired language acquisition device (LAD) in their brains. They are born with the major principles of language in place, but with many parameters to set (such as whether sentences in the language(s) they are to acquire must have explicit subjects). According to nativist theory, when the young child is exposed to a language, their LAD makes it possible for them to set the parameters and deduce the grammatical principles, because the principles are innate.

Mark Baker's work, The Atoms of Language (2004) presents arguments that there are not only certain "parameters" (as Chomsky called them) that are innate switches in our LAD, but we are very close to the point where these parameters could be put together in a "periodic table of languages" as determined by their parameter features. Baker's work is very controversial, however, because he has argued (1996: 496-515) that principles and parameters do not have biological or sociological origins, but instead were created by God (i.e. creationism). In contrast to Baker's theological creationism, Chomsky, although not a creationist has been described as a magical creationist or a crypto-creationist (e.g. MacFarquhar, 2003: 71) by people who find his scepticism of natural selection troubling. Chomsky does however make it clear in a reply to John Maynard Smith that he does believe that the innate capacity for language can be explained by biology when he states that language "... can be studied in the manner of other biological systems." [1].

In addition, there are significant studies in biogenetics that strongly suggest that the genetic factors that combine to build the brain contain redundant systems for recognizing patterns of both sight and sound.

One idea central to the Chomskian view is the idea of Universal Grammar, which posits that all languages have the same basic underlying structure, and that specific languages have rules that transform these underlying structures into the specific patterns found in given languages. Another argument is that without a propensity for language, human infants would be unable to learn such complete speech patterns in a natural human environment where complete sentences are the exception. This is sometimes mischaracterised as the poverty of the stimulus argument. Psychologists such as Catherine Snow at Harvard, who study parent-child interaction, point out that children do not have to deduce the principles of language from impoverished and ungrammatical scraps of talk. Many studies of child directed speech or CDS have shown that speech to young children is slow, clear, grammatical, and very repetitious, rather like traditional language lessons.

Other related archives

1970, Articles lacking sources, CHILDES database, Catherine Snow, Construction Grammar, Critical period, Derek Bickerton, Elizabeth Bates, Eric Lenneberg, Feral children, Genie, HPSG, Hawaii Creole English, Hypothesis, ILR scale, Jean Berko Gleason, John Maynard Smith, Language, Language acquisition, MIT, Michael Tomasello, Nicaragua, Nicaraguan Sign Language, Noam Chomsky, Origin of language, Second language acquisition, Social interactionism, Steven Pinker, Universal Grammar, University of Maryland, College Park, Wikipedia articles needing factual verification, Wug Test, babbling, brain, child abuse, child directed speech, children, chimps, citation needed, creationism, fis phenomenon, humans, language, language acquisition device, nature, neotenic, nurture, parameters, pay scarce attention, phonology, plasticity, poverty of the stimulus, scepticism, second language, syntax



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Nativist theories", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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