This is a collection of scholarship devoted to the language of older children and adolescents. It offers a cross-disciplinary perspective, with contributors from sociolinguistics, anthropology, and sociology, using a variety of analytic approaches.
This is a collection of scholarship devoted to the language of older children and adolescents. It offers a cross-disciplinary perspective, with contributors from sociolinguistics, anthropology, and sociology, using a variety of analytic approaches.
Between early childhood and adulthood, language acquisition is succeeded by a bloom of repertoire for managing interaction, a growing sensitivity to the relation of language and society, an expanding ability to wield power through the strategic use of language, and an increasing sophistication in framing speech activities. This book examines a wide range of language practices among school-age children and teenagers, using data from naturally occurring recorded talkand from careful observation of interaction in peer groups. The contributors analyze talk at play, at school, and at work, documenting the growing communicative skills of young people while alwaysfocusing on what young speakers themselves do with (and through) language. Theoretical constructs to which the contributors appeal include Goffman's notion of footing and Hymes' communicative competence, as well as multiple characterizations of discourse structure. The chapters show older children as strategic language users, dynamic actors who are often concerned with defining themselves as a distinctive group, different from adults, yet who just as often display proficiency at sophisticateddiscourse activities that presage those of adulthood.
“"...no comprehensive examination of the language strategies of Englishspeakers from about seven to 18 has existed prior to Kids Talk. In addition tomiddle- and secondary-school English teachers, who will benefit enormously fromthis study's keen observations and practical suggestions, this volume will beuseful to those interested in linguistics, from upper-division undergraduatesthrough faculty."--Choice”
"Kids Talk is an excellent demonstration of the value of such integration."--Anthropology and Education Quarterly"...no comprehensive examination of the language strategies of English speakers from about seven to 18 has existed prior to Kids Talk. In addition to middle- and secondary-school English teachers, who will benefit enormously from this study's keen observations and practical suggestions, this volume will be useful to those interested in linguistics, from upper-division undergraduates through faculty."--Choice"Kids Talk is an excellent demonstration of the value of such integration."--Anthropology and Education Quarterly"...no comprehensive examination of the language strategies of English speakers from about seven to 18 has existed prior to Kids Talk. In addition to middle- and secondary-school English teachers, who will benefit enormously from this study's keen observations and practical suggestions, this volume will be useful to those interested in linguistics, from upper-division undergraduates through faculty."--Choice
Susan M. Hoyle is at National Library of Medicine. Carolyn Temple Adger is at Center for Applied Linguistics.
Between early childhood and adulthood, language acquisition is succeeded by a bloom of repertoire for managing interaction, a growing sensitivity to the relation of language and society, an expanding ability to wield power through the strategic use of language, and an increasing sophistication in framing speech activities. This book examines a wide range of language practices among school-age children and teenagers, using data from naturally occurring recorded talk and from careful observation of interaction in peer groups. The contributors analyze talk at play, at school, and at work, documenting the growing communicative skills of young people while always focusing on what young speakers themselves do with (and through) language. Theoretical constructs to which the contributors appeal include Goffman's notion of footing and Hymes' communicative competence, as well as multiple characterizations of discourse structure. The chapters show older children as strategic language users, dynamic actors who are often concerned with defining themselves as a distinctive group, different from adults, yet who just as often display proficiency at sophisticated discourse activities that presage those of adulthood.
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