How do children acquire and pronounce language?
From a young age, children get by in life by communicating
through screams to show all emotion, and crying too when portraying almost
every emotion. Without words and language, we wouldn’t be where we are today as
every culture relies on them, as they’re the most important thing a human will
ever learn. In the documentary, a 15 month old child was bilingual learning
both Greek and English. We found that it’s much easier for children to
understand and learn 2 languages at once as it uses a different part of the
brain to which adults do. When speaking the words, a human uses on average 30
muscles at once in order to produce the words which is why it’s so hard for
children to learn how to talk. From a young age, the larynx (vocal trap in the
throat) is extremely high up when they’re this young as it allows the child to
breathe whilst suckling and only begins to drop when they get around the age of
1. This is when the pitch becomes higher and the chords are higher too. A
disadvantage however of the larynx dropping (3cm lower) is that it means that
the child is more vulnerable to choking.
When they get to the age of about 2, the pace in which the
child learns new words becomes much quicker and the child in the documentary of
age 2 and a half began to learn as much as 10 new words a day. At this age, she
knows how to construct words into a sentence so that they begin to make sense,
however they make virtuous errors in which they use their initiative to add ‘s’ on the end of a pre-existing word
to make it plural even if the newly formed word doesn’t make sense, this
relates to the wug test also. At this age, children mostly get the grammar
correct all the time, as ‘children have an instinctive map for language’. It’s
also this age in which children begin to develop self- awareness in which they
recognise themselves in a reflection in the mirror and they realise they are
their own person, hence why they say about the terrible 2’s in which children
have their worst tantrums as they realise they are their own person and they
don’t understand the concept of sharing and want everything for themselves.