Written Language Acquisition - Key theorists

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AS - Level English Language (Child Language Acquisition) Flashcards on Written Language Acquisition - Key theorists, created by Izzy Backhouse on 28/11/2016.
Izzy Backhouse
Flashcards by Izzy Backhouse, updated more than 1 year ago
Izzy Backhouse
Created by Izzy Backhouse about 8 years ago
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Barry Kroll - 1981 Identified 4 stages of children's written development: 1) Preparation (up to age 6) - Basic motor skills & principles of spelling are acquired. 2) Consolidation (age 7/8) – Writing is similar to spoken language. This includes a more casual register, unfinished sentences, and clauses joined by conjunction ‘and’. 3) Differentiation (age 9/10) – Awareness of writing as separate from speech. Stronger understanding of writing for different audiences and purposes is evident. 4) Integration (mid-teens) – Personal voice becomes apparent in writing and appropriate linguistic choices are consistently made.
Joan Rothery Categories for evaluating children's writing: Observation - Child makes an observation followed by an evaluative comment. Recount - Typically a chronological sequence of events. Written subjectively (1st person), follows structure: orientation, event, reorientation Report - Factual and objective review of event/things Narrative - Story genre with a set pattern: orientation, complication, resolution (+ sometimes coda - identifies point of story).
Britton 3 modes of children's writing: 1) Expressive - Develops first as it resembles speech. Uses 1st person and content is based on personal preferences. 2) Poetic - Requires skills for crafting and shaping language. It is encouraged due to its creativity. Phonological features are common eg. rhythm, rhyme, alliteration, as well as descriptive devices eg. similes, adjectives. 3) Transnational - Develops last (secondary school age) once children have dissociated speech from writing. It is the style of academic essays as it is impersonal in style and tone. Formal sentence structures are used to signpost sections and ideas. Structure tends to be chronological.
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