Language use can go on a roller-coaster ride during childhood
February 25th, 2011 - 3:14 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Feb 25 (ANI): A North Carolina State University study has found that language use can go on a roller-coaster ride during childhood as kids adopt and abandon vernacular language patterns.
“We found that there is a ‘roller-coaster effect,’ featuring an ebb and flow in a child’s use of vernacular English over the course of his or her language development,” says Walt Wolfram, William C. Friday Distinguished University Professor of English Linguistics at NC State and co-author of several recent papers describing the research.
One implication of the finding involves education, since teachers often advocate teaching standard English early in a childhood education.
“This approach does seem to work at first but it doesn’t last,” said Wolfram.
In other words, if a school system wants its students to graduate high school with a strong foundation in standard English, it may have to revisit standard English later in the education curriculum.
Specifically, the researchers found that children come to school speaking English with a relatively high number of vernacular features. Then, through the first four grades of elementary school, those features are reduced, as children adopt more standard English language patterns.
As the children move toward middle school, the level of vernacular rises - though many children often reduce their use of vernacular again as they enter high school.
“This finding reveals a cyclic pattern in the use of African-American vernacular English that no one expected to see during children’s language development,” said Janneke Van Hofwegen, a research associate at NC State and co-author of the study.
The researchers noted that, while their data looked solely at African-American children, the findings might be applicable more broadly to other groups.
The study began in 1990, following 88 African-American children from central North Carolina in order to track their language development. The study is ongoing, with 68 of the original participants still being tracked. (ANI)
- Lead exposure in early childhood linked to lower test scores - Oct 20, 2009
- A shared experience moulds Indian and US students - Nov 18, 2011
- Bookaroo outreach drive takes literature to schools - Nov 09, 2011
- Childhood obesity comes from unhealthy lifestyle: Study - Feb 01, 2011
- Rollercoaster malfunction leaves 25 hanging midair - Jan 25, 2011
- Early educational enrichment can bring improved health in adulthood - Jan 15, 2011
- African-American men 'most disadvantaged, least helped in U.S.' - Aug 29, 2010
- Leaded gasoline chief culprit for 20th century neurological defects - Jun 16, 2010
- Mums who drink early in pregnancy 'more likely to have unruly kids' - Mar 22, 2011
- Hiring Of Ebonics Translators Sparks Controversy - Aug 24, 2010
- African ancestry linked to high-risk breast cancer - Jul 23, 2010
- Prevention of childhood obesity should begin early in life - Mar 01, 2010
- Harvard outpaces Oxford in admitting African-American, Latino students - Apr 13, 2011
- Mallika Sherawat bags role opposite 'Avatar' star Laz Alonso - Feb 03, 2010
- Michelle Williams is the cover girl of Elle UK - Oct 31, 2011
Tags: african american vernacular, african american vernacular english, childhood education, co author, cyclic pattern, distinguished university, ebb and flow, education curriculum, english linguistics, language development, language patterns, nc state, north carolina state university, research associate, roller coaster ride, speaking english, strong foundation, vernacular language, walt wolfram, william c friday