Topic 2. Factors Affecting Cognitive Development
Topic 2. Factors Affecting Cognitive Development
Topic 2. Factors Affecting Cognitive Development
Language Development
The use of language sets humans apart from the rest of the animal kingdom. Animals can
communicate through limited number of calls and signals that convey messages. In contrast,
human languages are amazingly flexible and productive. Language is also an inventive tool with
which we express our thoughts and interpretations of what we have seen, heard, or otherwise
experienced.
Although language is one of the most complex and abstract bodies of knowledge we ever acquire,
children in all cultures come to understand and use this intricate form of communication very early
in life. In fact, some infants are talking before they can walk. How is this possible? Are infants
biologically programmed to acquire language? What kinds of linguistic input must they receive in
order to become language users? Is there any relation between a child’s cooing, gesturing, or
babbling and his or her later production of meaningful words? How do infants and toddlers come
to attach meaning to words? Do all children pass through the same steps or stages as they acquire
their native language? And what practical lessons must children learn to become truly effective
communicators? These are but a few of the issues we will consider as we trace the development
of children’s linguistic skills and try to determine how youngsters become so proficient in using
language at such an early age. (Shaffer and Kipp, 2007)
Phonology
Phonology refers to the basic units of sound, or phonemes, that are used in a language and the rules
for combining these sounds. Each language uses only a subset of the sounds that humans are
capable of generating, and no two languages have precisely the same phonologies—a fact that
explains why foreign languages may sound rather strange to us. Clearly, children must learn how
to discriminate, produce, and combine the speech like sounds of their native language in order to
make sense of the speech they hear and to be understood when they try to speak (Kelley, Jones, &
Fein, 2004).
Morphology
Rules of morphology specify how words are formed from sounds (Kelley, Jones, & Fein,
2004). In English, these rules include the rule for forming past tenses of verbs by adding –ed and
the rule for forming plurals by adding -s, as well as rules for using other prefixes and suffixes,
and rules that specify proper combinations of sounds to form meaningful words. We learn, for
example, that flow (not vlow) is how to describe what the river is doing.
Semantics
Semantics refers to the meanings expressed in words and sentences (Kelley, Jones, & Fein, 2004).
The smallest meaningful units of language are morphemes, and there are two types. Free
morphemes can stand alone as words (for example, dog), whereas bound morphemes cannot stand
alone but change meaning when attached to a free morpheme (for example, adding the bound
morpheme -s to the word dog means that the speaker is talking about more than one pooch).
Children must recognize that words and bound grammatical morphemes convey meaning—that
they symbolize particular objects, actions, and relations and can be combined to form larger and
more complex meanings (sentences)—before they can comprehend others’ speech and be
understood when they speak.
Syntax
Language also involves syntax, or the rules that specify how words are to be combined to form
meaningful phrases and sentences (Kelley, Jones, & Fein, 2004). Consider these three sentences:
1. Garfield Odie bit.
2. Garfield bit Odie.
3. Odie bit Garfield.
Even very young speakers of English recognize that the first sentence violates the rules of English
sentence structure, although this word order would be perfectly acceptable in languages with a
different syntax, such as French. The second and third sentences are grammatical English
sentences that contain the same words but convey very different meanings. They also illustrate
how word meanings (semantics) interact with sentence structure (word order) to give the entire
sentence a meaning. Children must master rules of syntax before they can become proficient at
speaking or understanding a language.
Pragmatics
Children must also master the pragmatics of language—knowledge of how language might be used
to communicate effectively (Diesendruck & Markson, 2001; Kelley, Jones, & Fein, 2004). Imagine
a 6-year-old who is trying to explain a new game to her 2-yearold brother. She cannot speak to the
toddler as if he were an adult or an age-mate; she will have to adjust her speech to his linguistic
capabilities if she hopes to be understood.
Pragmatics also involves sociolinguistic knowledge—culturally specified rules that dictate how
language should be used in particular social contexts. A 3-year-old may not yet realize that the
best way of obtaining a cookie from Grandma is to say “Grandma, may I please have a cookie?”
rather than demanding “Gimme a cookie, Grandma!” In order to communicate most effectively,
children must become “social editors” and take into account where they are, with whom they are
speaking, and what the listener already knows, needs, and wants to hear. (Shaffer and Kipp, 2007)
B. F. Skinner argued that children learn to speak appropriately because they are reinforced for
grammatically correct speech. According to Skinner, “language is learned through imitation and
reward”. For Skinner, language development follows the following process:
• Children listen to adults speak.
• They imitate the sounds they hear.
• Adults reward them by smiling, nodding their heads or asking them to repeat the words.
This reinforcement encourages children to imitate them. So according to the learning
perspective, caregivers “teach” language by modeling and by reinforcing grammatical speech.
(http://oasis.col.org/bitstream/handle/11599/725/Module09.pdf?sequence=12&isAllowed=y)
B. PSYCHOSOCİAL FACTORS
1. Early Stimulation
2. Family Structure or Literate Environment
3. Child’s Attitude (i.e. not very interested in language, prefers other modalities like physical
activities.)
4. Economic Status
5. Changes in child’s environment (e.g. moving.)
6. Short attention span.
7. Exposure to too many languages for the child.
8. Inadequate awareness of communication, lacks “communication intent”.