THE MILESTONES OF SPEECH AND LANGUAGE.

Einstein was no elephant

The mammal brain re-organizes it's function at three months into paired modalities

The human brain re-organizes itself again at 12 months into a single unit

0 to 1 minute--well, for crying out loud

1 minute to 2 months--How do you spell Major Nuisance? U-n-d-i-f-f-e-r-e-n-t-i-a-t-e-d c-r-y-i-n-g.

How do you spell opportunity: I-n-c-o-n-v-e-n-i-e-n-c-e ?

Cast your crumbs upon the water and what do you get--soggy crumbs!

2 months to 3 months--How do you spell baby-communication: D-i-f-f-e-r-e-n-t-i-a-t-e-d C-r-y-i-n-g.

  • Research suggests to the contrary, noting that when the crying is taken out of context, the mothers are unable to decode it's meaning. But then again, communication in context is what pragmatics is all about.

    6 to 8 months (and sometimes earlier)--Babies are not just LALLING around, but are also using the JARGON of their language.

    Inflection is another element of Prosody. When people speak, their voices typically raise and lower in pitch. For example, if one reads the two underlined headings above ("May I have this dance?" and "May you have this dance!"), the first will probably end in a rising pitch, while the second will probably fall.

    Juncture is the fourth element of Prosody. This refers to a short, almost imperceptible pause between words in a sentence. If you think of a "white house" and then say the words, you will put a slight pause between the words. But if you remember that the President lives in the "White House," and say those words, you may note that that pause is missing.

  • Stress: Changing the stress pattern brings different contexts into the meaning of a sentence. For example:

    8 to 12 months--It sounds like speech but it's really ECHOLALIA to me.

  • You may say to the baby of 8 months, "Daddy's coming!" and the baby may reply, "Daddy's coming!" It sounds great but in most instances it is just a fancy bit of jargon in which the child has put the phonemes in the "proper" order.

    ONE YEAR--a time to be one! .

  • And it is at this point that the child speaks one word. (While all this may be true, the one year old child has accrued a receptive vocabulary of around 50 words.)

    1 year to 1 1/2 years--Identification Language

    So what is the child doing motorically at 1 year to 1 1/2 years during the period of Identification Language?

    1 1/2 years to 2 years--Anticipatory Language, and the Holophrastic sentence.

    So, what is the child doing motorically at 1 1/2 years to 2 year, during the period of Anticipatory Language?

    TWO to 2 1/2 YEARS--SYNTACTIC SPEECH--50 small words for baby and a big bang for language development!

    (It's not the most scientific kind of illustration but then, as I may have mentioned, we are only a Class II University so we can get away with that kind of stuff.)

    TWO and 1/2 to 3 YEARS:COMMUNICATIVE INTENT--and a 1000 new bucks for your bang!

    THREE YEARS to Senescence--INDIVIDUO-WHAT?