Developmental Order & Meanings Communicated With Different Pronouns
Developmental Order & Meanings Communicated With Different Pronouns
Developmental Order & Meanings Communicated With Different Pronouns
The acquisition of pronouns can be very confusing because of the abstract nature of
their existence in the language . In addition, like prepositions, the same pronoun can
be used to convey different meanings, depending on how it is positioned in a string of
words. We could get along just fine without pronouns, but we use them for reasons of
economy of speaking.
At the most rudimentary level, SLPs teach children that a pronoun can replace a noun
or another pronoun. You use pronouns like ``he,'' ``which,'' ``none,'' and ``you'' to
make your sentences less cumbersome and less repetitive.
Grammarians classify pronouns into several types, including the personal pronoun, the
demonstrative pronoun, the interrogative pronoun, the indefinite pronoun, the relative
pronoun, the reflexive pronoun, and the intensive pronoun.
http://members.attcanada.ca/~the2imps/turefpronoun.html ,
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/internet-grammar/nouns/pronoun.htm ,
http://ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/pronouns1.htm ,
http://www.james.rtsq.qc.ca/Virtgram/pronounsth.htm are web sites which explain the
different types of pronouns in a fairly straightforward manner.
The following page will deal with a few of the pronouns that are most frequently
taught by SLPs.
When teaching demonstrative pronouns, you are teaching the child to communicate
that the pronoun points to and identifies a noun or a pronoun. ``This'' and ``these''
refer to things that are nearby either in space or in time, while ``that'' and ``those''
refer to things that are farther away in space or time. The demonstrative pronouns
are ``this,'' ``that,'' ``these,'' and ``those.'' ``This'' and ``that'' are used to refer to
singular nouns or noun phrases and ``these'' and ``those'' are used to refer to plural
nouns and noun phrases.
Personal Pronouns (will begin to emerge after some possessive & demonstrative
pronouns are heard)
Teach a child that you can use a reflexive pronoun to refer back to the subject of the
clause or sentence. The reflexive pronouns are ``myself,'' ``yourself,'' ``herself,''
``himself,'' ``itself,'' ``ourselves,'' ``yourselves,'' and ``themselves.''
Indefinite Pronouns
http://www4.topnet.it/dina/adapt/AdaptEng1/grammar1/exercises/pronouns/vc-
pronouns-lb.htm Ten multiple choice questions testing possessive pronouns.
http://www.learnline.ntu.edu.au/studyskills/wr/sentences/pronoun2q.html A dozen
questions in multiple choice format. All questions are looking for the correct personal
pronoun to complete the sentence.
The sites listed below assess a variety of different pronoun types in the exercises.
These sites are useful after a student has learned individual pronoun types and can
answer questions by shifting between pronoun types.
http://grammar.uoregon.edu/pronouns/pronounquiz2/Iquizprn2.html 20 questions.
This exercise assesses all types of pronouns. A multiple choice task. Fairly high level.
Good content. A sentence is presented and the student is asked to identify the type of
pronoun that was used. Choices are : a. personal pronoun b. relative pronoun c.
indefinite pronoun d. demonstrative pronoun e. reflexive pronoun f.
interrogative pronoun
http://www.uvsc.edu/owl/tests/pronouns/pronouns.html A high school level task. 20
multiple choice questions. The first five ask the student to choose the appropriate
pronoun to complete the sentence. The last 15 questions are more of a metalinguistic
task, asking the student if the sentence is correct. If incorrect, the student is asked to
correct it.
http://www4.topnet.it/dina/adapt/AdaptEng1/grammar1/exercises/pronouns/pronouns.
htm 15 multiple choice questions testing a variety of different types of pronouns.
http://www.eduplace.com/cgi-bin/hme-quiz-directions.cgi?
Grade=2&Unit=3&Topic=Nouns+and+Pronouns This is a game called Grammar
Blast. Game Rules 1. Each game has 10 questions. Each question has 4 answer
choices. 2. Read the question and choose the answer you think is correct. Then click
the Are you right? button. 3. If you're right on the first try, you'll get 10 points. If
you're right on the second try, you'll get 5 points. If you miss the second time, we'll
give you the right answer. This is second grade level.
http://www.eduplace.com/cgi-bin/hme-quiz-directions.cgi?
Grade=3&Unit=6&Topic=Pronouns This is a game called Grammar Blast. Game
Rules 1. Each game has 10 questions. Each question has 4 answer choices. 2. Read
the question and choose the answer you think is correct. Then click the Are you
right? button. 3. If you're right on the first try, you'll get 10 points. If you're right on
the second try, you'll get 5 points. If you miss the second time, we'll give you the right
answer. This is third grade level.
http://www.eduplace.com/cgi-bin/hme-quiz-directions.cgi?
Grade=4&Unit=6&Topic=Pronouns This is a game called Grammar Blast. Game
Rules 1. Each game has 10 questions. Each question has 4 answer choices. 2. Read
the question and choose the answer you think is correct. Then click the Are you
right? button. 3. If you're right on the first try, you'll get 10 points. If you're right on
the second try, you'll get 5 points. If you miss the second time, we'll give you the right
answer. This is fourth grade level.
http://www.eduplace.com/cgi-bin/hme-quiz-directions.cgi?
Grade=5&Unit=6&Topic=Pronouns This is a game called Grammar Blast. Game
Rules 1. Each game has 10 questions. Each question has 4 answer choices. 2. Read
the question and choose the answer you think is correct. Then click the Are you
right? button. 3. If you're right on the first try, you'll get 10 points. If you're right on
the second try, you'll get 5 points. If you miss the second time, we'll give you the right
answer. This is fifth grade level.