Despite claims by some theorists to the contrary, investigators have shown that information about grammatical errors is available to young children learning language via the conversational responses of their parents. The present study described five categories of responses in the conversations of working mothers and fathers to their normally developing two-year-old sons, and investigated whether any of these responses were differentially related to well-formed vs. ill-formed child utterances. Subjects were six middle-class, monolingual (English) parent-child dyads. Parents worked full-time jobs and the children were enrolled in full-time daycare. Within a two week period, four 20-minute conversational samples were audio and video recorded f...
Parents often use partial self-repetitions with variation in successive utterances (e.g., Want to ge...
This paper reports the findings of an observational study of two family groups consisting of a mothe...
This research examined the relationship between mothers' speech and their children's syntax developm...
Research into the linguistic environment of children acquiring a first language has generated contro...
This study compared the language behaviours of parents of toddlers with language delay (LD) and lang...
Mothers are an important part of children’s language environments, and are assumed to play a role in...
Abstract only availableFaculty Mentor: Dr. Judith Goodman, Communication Sciences & DisordersAlthoug...
Temporal and topic contingencies between child and mother speech are reported at 2 achievements in l...
The acquisition of the first language is a long and complicated process. Besides incorrect pronuncia...
The correlation between the communicative intent of parents, in terms of their expectation of a resp...
Master of EducationThis study identified and examined styles of parent language during a shared book...
In this original research, the effect of a single 40 minutes parent-implemented language interventio...
Early language development relates to a child’s later language ability, cognitive development, and a...
The purpose of this article is to examine differential communication patterns of fathers and mothers...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98418/1/j.1467-1770.1975.tb00251.x.pd
Parents often use partial self-repetitions with variation in successive utterances (e.g., Want to ge...
This paper reports the findings of an observational study of two family groups consisting of a mothe...
This research examined the relationship between mothers' speech and their children's syntax developm...
Research into the linguistic environment of children acquiring a first language has generated contro...
This study compared the language behaviours of parents of toddlers with language delay (LD) and lang...
Mothers are an important part of children’s language environments, and are assumed to play a role in...
Abstract only availableFaculty Mentor: Dr. Judith Goodman, Communication Sciences & DisordersAlthoug...
Temporal and topic contingencies between child and mother speech are reported at 2 achievements in l...
The acquisition of the first language is a long and complicated process. Besides incorrect pronuncia...
The correlation between the communicative intent of parents, in terms of their expectation of a resp...
Master of EducationThis study identified and examined styles of parent language during a shared book...
In this original research, the effect of a single 40 minutes parent-implemented language interventio...
Early language development relates to a child’s later language ability, cognitive development, and a...
The purpose of this article is to examine differential communication patterns of fathers and mothers...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98418/1/j.1467-1770.1975.tb00251.x.pd
Parents often use partial self-repetitions with variation in successive utterances (e.g., Want to ge...
This paper reports the findings of an observational study of two family groups consisting of a mothe...
This research examined the relationship between mothers' speech and their children's syntax developm...