Clayton First semester 2008 (Day)
This unit traces the development of child language from pre-speech to later stages of acquisition, including the development of communicative competence. It examines the development of the child's phonological, syntactic, morphological and semantic system and attempts to account for this development by considering various linguistic models and theories. The unit also investigates the comprehension and production of speech. Experimental evidence is examined in order to determine the psychological validity of the various models and theories which have been proposed to describe the process involved in comprehending and producing speech.
By the completion of this subject, students are expected to have developed
Participation: 5%; Oral Group Presentation: 15%; In-Class Test: 20%; Research Journal 15%; Essay 2nd year students (2500 words): 45%;
2 hours (1 x 2 hour seminar) per week
A first-year sequence in Linguistics.