Test Bank for Language Development From Theory to Practice, 3rd Edition
Preview Extract
Test Bank
Chapter 2: Building Blocks of Language
Multiple Choice
1. Words that differ by only one phoneme, such as โlowโ and โrow,โ are called
______________________________.
a. Minimal pairs
b. Phonotactics
c. Internal representations
d. Maximal pairs
2. ______________________________ is/are the childโs acquisition of internal
representation of the phonemes composing his or her native language.
a. Phonological knowledge
b. Phonological productions
c. Prosody
d. Phonotactic productions
3. Childrenโs phonological knowledge and production are sufficiently well developed by age
________________ year(s) to provide for fully intelligible speech.
a. 1 ยฝ
b. 2-3
c. 3-4
d. 6
4. A contributing factor to the struggle some children have in developing basic word-reading
skills is underdeveloped ______________________________.
a. Phoneme counting
b. Phonological productions
c. Phonemic awareness
d. Phonological awareness
5. ______________________________ is the importance of a phoneme in the phonemic
inventory of a language.
a. Phonemic contrast
b. Phonemic frequency
c. Functional load
d. Consonantal dominance
6. What is the earliest-appearing grammatical morpheme?
a. Plural โs
b. Present progressive โing
c. Past tense โed
d. โly
7.
When a child includes a grammatical morpheme in ___________ or more of obligatory
contexts, he or she has mastered the morpheme.
a. 50%
b. 60%
c. 75%
d. 80%
8. Children who can readily switch between dialects may have heightened
____________________________, which can support reading development.
a. Metalinguistic awareness
b. Theory of mind
c. Phonological awareness
d. Executive function
9. One hallmark feature of SLI is difficulty with __________________________.
a. Derivational morphemes
b. Grammatical morphology
c. Metalinguistic knowledge
d. Semantic feature analysis
10. By age _____________, a childโs utterances are nearly as long as those of adults.
a. 4
b. 5
c. 6
d. 8
11. The ________________________________is a calculation of the average number of
morphemes per utterance.
a. Type-token ratio
b. Total number of words
c. Morphological percentage
d. Mean length of utterance
12. _______________________________ sentences make a statement.
a. Declarative
b. Interrogative
c. Imperative
d. Compound
13. A _______________________________ is a cluster of words organized around a bead.
a. Conjunction
b. Phrase
c. Clause
d. Sentence
14. The ________________________________ hypothesis emphasizes that the grammatical
properties of childrenโs language use depend on exposure to the properties in childdirected speech.
a. Nature versus nurture
b. Learning-from-input
c. Language disorder
d. Syntactic complexity
15. Adolescents with Down syndrome produce sentences that average ____________
morphemes long.
a. 4
b. 6
c. 8
d. 10
16. A child learns about _____________ new words per year between ages 1 and 7 years.
a. 210
b. 380
c. 590
d. 860
17. ___________________________________ are words that refer to all members of a
category.
a. Categorical terms
b. General nominals
c. Specific nominals
d. Modifiers
18. Children often do not acquire words that describe beliefs and mental states until about age
______________.
a. 1 ยฝ
b. 2 ยฝ
c. 3
d. 6
19. In _________________________________, a great deal of contextual information is
provided about a novel word either linguistically or extralinguistically.
a. Inferential contexts
b. Nonostensive word learning contexts
c. Supralinguistic contexts
d. Ostensive word learning contexts
20. Early gender differences in vocabulary learning often attenuate by around age
__________.
a. 5
b. 7
c. 8
d. 10
21. The term _______________________________ refers to stylistic variations in language
that occur in different situational contexts.
a. Communication function
b. Protoconversation
c. Context-specific
d. Register
Essay
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Name three tasks that can be used to examine a childโs phonological awareness.
What is the difference between bound morphemes and free morphemes?
What are the three earliest developing wh-words.
What is complex syntax?
Describe beliefs about vocabulary growth in terms of the vocabulary spurt versus a linear
growth.
What is the difference between a lead-in and a follow-in?
Explain the concept of spreading activation as it relates to semantic networks.
What are the components of conversational schema?
Why should practitioners consider the social and cultural contexts of language
development when working with a child?
ANSWER KEY
Chapter 2: Building Blocks of Language
Multiple Choice
1. A
2. A
3. C
4. D
5. C
6. B
7. C
8. A
9. B
10. C
11. D
12. A
13. B
14. B
15. A
16. D
17. B
18. C
19. D
20. B
21. D
Essay
1. Syllable counting, rhyme detection, initial sound identification, initial sound elision,
phoneme counting.
2. Bound morphemes must be bound or attached to other morphemes. Free morphemes can
stand alone.
3. What, where, and why
4. The use of phrase and clause structures as well as conjunctive devices for organizing
internal structures of sentences.
5. One long-standing belief is that children undergo a vocabulary spurt that begins near the
end of the second year and continues for several years. The term spurt implies that
children transition from a slow stage of development to a rapid stage of development with
an inflection point differentiating the stages. Some researchers contend that relatively few
children experience a vocabulary spurt. Rather, most show a continuous, linear increase
in their vocabulary size.
6. In a lead-in, an adult labels an object or event that is outside of the childโs attentional
focus. In a follow-in, an adult labels an object or event that is currently the childโs
attentional focus.
7. In spreading activation, activation of specific entries spreads across the network
according to the strength of connections among entries. For example, of the word bird is
activated, a number of additional entries in the semantic network are also activated
because of semantic similarities.
8. Initiation and establishment of a topic, navigation of a series of contingent turns that
maintain or shift the topic, and resolution and closure.
9. Social and cultural communities have distinct rules about how language should be used
during social interactions. Achievements in each area of language reflect the socialization
practices children experience at home, at school, and in the community.
Document Preview (6 of 189 Pages)
User generated content is uploaded by users for the purposes of learning and should be used following SchloarOn's honor code & terms of service.
You are viewing preview pages of the document. Purchase to get full access instantly.
-37%
Test Bank for Language Development From Theory to Practice, 3rd Edition
$18.99 $29.99Save:$11.00(37%)
24/7 Live Chat
Instant Download
100% Confidential
Store
Olivia Smith
0 (0 Reviews)
Best Selling
The World Of Customer Service, 3rd Edition Test Bank
$18.99 $29.99Save:$11.00(37%)
Chemistry: Principles And Reactions, 7th Edition Test Bank
$18.99 $29.99Save:$11.00(37%)
Test Bank for Hospitality Facilities Management and Design, 4th Edition
$18.99 $29.99Save:$11.00(37%)
Solution Manual for Designing the User Interface: Strategies for Effective Human-Computer Interaction, 6th Edition
$18.99 $29.99Save:$11.00(37%)
Data Structures and Other Objects Using C++ 4th Edition Solution Manual
$18.99 $29.99Save:$11.00(37%)
2023-2024 ATI Pediatrics Proctored Exam with Answers (139 Solved Questions)
$18.99 $29.99Save:$11.00(37%)