Conversational Competence and Social Development
This book provides new insight into the development of the child's ability to become a competent participant in conversation. The author combines a pragmatic analysis of the functions language can perform with an innovative and extensive empirical investigation of the development of young children's language use and sociocognitive skills. She gives a detailed description of the development of children's language between the ages of three-and-a-half and seven, broadens the scope of theorizing about language development by placing it in relation to the development of social understanding, and provides a new framework for understanding speech problems and designing ways to solve them. It is the first study to find a strong link between language, sociocognitive development, and social development. It will be welcomed by child language specialists, developmental and social psychologists, conversation and discourse analysts, and their advanced students.
Reviews & endorsements
"...does succeed in pointing toward important dimensions for future research." Catherine Garvey, Contemporary Psychology
Product details
November 2006Paperback
9780521031837
180 pages
228 × 151 × 11 mm
0.278kg
Available
Table of Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Introducing pragmatics
- 2. Toward an elaborated model of language: speech-act theory and conversational analysis
- 3. Language use and social functioning
- 4. Methods of research
- 5. Evidence on language use
- 6. Interdependence of social cognition and communication
- 7. Implications and applications
- Appendices
- Notes
- References
- Author index
- Subject index.