Using Language and Writing to Get Things Done

Using Language and Writing to Get Things Done
photo by: Kris Hoet
By R. E. Shagoury
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Young children between the ages of two and three are growing in their ability to be fluent and sophisticated language users. Because they now understand the structure of sentences, they move beyond telegraphic speech to the endless variations that word order and word parts allow speakers. They use endings like -ing, use plurals markers; they show they are discovering the invisible rules of their language. In fact, it is at this time that children "insist" on the rules, overgeneralizing to make irregular plurals and verbs regular! You may hear a child use words such as "mouses" or "foots," or verbs such as "goed" showing that they have internalized certain patterns in the language they heard and are using.

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