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Ryan Catalani

Picking Brand Names in China Is a Business Itself - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "More than many nations, China is a place where names are imbued with deep significance. Western companies looking to bring their products to China face a problem not unlike that of Chinese parents naming a baby boy... And so the art of picking a brand name that resonates with Chinese consumers is no longer an art. It has become a sort of science, with consultants, computer programs and linguistic analyses to ensure that what tickles a Mandarin ear does not grate on a Cantonese one. ... Precisely why some Chinese words are so freighted with emotion is anyone's guess. But Denise Sabet, the vice general manager at Labbrand, suggests the reasons include cultural differences and the Chinese reliance on characters for words, rather than a phonetic alphabet. "
Bo Coolen

Will Swearing Harm Your Child? - 6 views

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    Most parents try hard to protect their children from hearing swear words, and children are often punished or reprimanded when they use profane language. The federal government seeks to protect children from hearing swear words through censoring of language in TV shows (particularly during the "family hours").
ipentland16

Could Bilingual Education Mold Kids' Brains to Better Resist Distraction? | MindShift - 2 views

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    For decades, psychologists cautioned against raising children bilingual. They warned parents and teachers that learning a second language as a child was bad for brain development. But recent studies have found exactly the opposite. Researchers now believe that when people learn another language, they develop cognitive advantages that improve their attention, self-control and ability to deal with conflicting information.
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    Raising bilingual children is actually good for them. They develop a better ability to concentrate and deal with conflicting information. This could indicate that nurturing a child's brain can increase their language capabilities.
Lara Cowell

Brain structure of infants predicts language skills at one year - 2 views

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    Using a brain-imaging technique that examines the entire infant brain, University of Washington researchers have found that the anatomy of certain brain areas - the hippocampus and cerebellum - can predict children's language abilities at one year of age. Infants with a greater concentration of gray and white matter in the cerebellum and the hippocampus showed greater language ability at age 1, as measured by babbling, recognition of familiar names and words, and ability to produce different types of sounds. This is the first study to identify a relationship between language and the cerebellum and hippocampus in infants. Neither brain area is well-known for its role in language: the cerebellum is typically linked to motor learning, while the hippocampus is commonly recognized as a memory processor. "Looking at the whole brain produced a surprising result and scientists live for surprises. It wasn't the language areas of the infant brain that predicted their future linguistic skills, but instead brain areas linked to motor abilities and memory processing," Kuhl said. "Infants have to listen and memorize the sound patterns used by the people in their culture, and then coax their own mouths and tongues to make these sounds in order join the social conversation and get a response from their parents." The findings could reflect infants' abilities to master the motor planning for speech and to develop the memory requirements for keeping the sound patterns in mind. "The brain uses many general skills to learn language," Kuhl said. "Knowing which brain regions are linked to this early learning could help identify children with developmental disabilities and provide them with early interventions that will steer them back toward a typical developmental path."
Lara Cowell

Your Baby's Brain Holds the Key to Solving Society's Problems - 0 views

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    Dana Suskind, a University of Chicago pediatric otolaryngologist, states our exposure to rich language in the first three years of our lives is critical not just for our ability to pronounce long words but for our overall development and success. The 4 Ts are key points for parents and caretakers of small children: 1. Tune in: be interested in what your child is interested in 2. Talk more: talking more, using richer language, narrating your child's day. 3. Take turns: viewing your child as a conversational partner from day one. Babies are born to learn. 4. Turn off the technology: there is no substitute for real live human interaction.
Lara Cowell

Language acquisition: From sounds to the meaning: Do young infants know that words in l... - 0 views

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    Without understanding the 'referential function' of language (words as 'verbal labels', symbolizing other things) it is impossible to learn a language. Is this implicit knowledge already present early in infants? Marno, Nespor, and Mehler of the International School of Advanced Studies conducted experiments with infants (4 months old). Babies watched a series of videos where a person might (or might not) utter an (invented) name of an object, while directing (or not directing) their gaze towards the position on the screen where a picture of the object would appear. By monitoring the infants' gaze, Marno and colleagues observed that, in response to speech cues, the infant's gaze would look faster for the visual object, indicating that she is ready to find a potential referent of the speech. However, this effect did not occur if the person in the video remained silent or if the sound was a non-speech sound. "The mere fact of hearing verbal stimuli placed the infants in a condition to expect the appearance, somewhere, of an object to be associated with the word, whereas this didn't happen when there was no speech, even when the person in the video directed the infant's gaze to where the object would appear, concludes Marno. "This suggests that infants at this early age already have some knowledge that language implies a relation between words and the surrounding physical world. Moreover, they are also ready to find out these relations, even if they don't know anything about the meanings of the words yet. Thus, a good advice to mothers is to speak to their infants, because infants might understand much more than they would show, and in this way their attention can be efficiently guided by their caregivers."
anonymous

Babys Speak in Mother's Tongue - 8 views

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    German researchers say babies begin to pick up the nuances of their parents' accents while still in the womb.
Lisa Stewart

Parents' Verbal Abuse Leaves Long-Term Legacy - Psychiatric News - 3 views

  • Moreover, these links were stronger than those for being a victim of physical abuse during childhood. T
Lisa Stewart

Amy Chua - Retreat of the 'Tiger Mother' - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    What do you think? Should this be tagged "verbal_abuse"?
Lisa Stewart

Amy Chua Is a Wimp - NYTimes.com - 4 views

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    So...I'm off on a tangent here--not really linguistics. But something I think you all would be interested in reading about. And David Brooks is a skillful writer.
Travis Matsuzaki

Carleton College: Admissions: Essay Tips - 3 views

  • View it as an opportunity. The essay is one of the few things that you've got complete control over in the application process, especially by the time you're in your senior year. You've already earned most of your grades; you've already made most of your impressions on teachers; and chances are, you've already found a set of activities you're interested in continuing. So when you write the essay, view it as something more than just a page to fill up with writing. View it as a chance to tell the admissions committee about who you are as a person.
    • Travis Matsuzaki
       
      If you approach the College Essay as an opportunity to tell your story; rather than a tedious chore that you have to do in order to get into College.  If you do this then writing your essay becomes less stressful, and easier to write.  Think of it as trying to make a new friend (with someone thats very intellect oriented....). 
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    I think that is really helpful because everyone thinks that a college essay needs to be written and re-written a million times and it sometimes ends up not sounding like you.  This reminds me of what the interviews with college counselors I have had say, that it needs to sound and be you.
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    The college essay seems to be one that is not written for the college admission officers, nor your college counselor, parents and teachers, but rather for yourself. No one should tell you to change your ideas if you believe that they are inspired by you and represent who you are. You need to forget the "rules" of writing a good college essay, and instead focus on writing one that pleases you.
Ryan Catalani

Parents' Ums And Uhs Can Help Toddlers Learn Language : Shots - Health Blog : NPR - 4 views

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    "They are making the inference - not consciously - that when someone has difficulty making a word they are most likely referring to an object that is rare," says Aslin.
Alexander Antoku

Can Texting Help With Spelling? | Scholastic.com - 0 views

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    Online Tools There are a growing number of resources that can help you use texting in the classroom. Here are some of our favorites. classparrot.com Allows you to send free text-message alerts to students and parents-think "Spelling test tomorrow" or "Don't forget your field trip money."
anonymous

American Dialects : Dialect map of American English - 0 views

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    Dialect Map of American English Not all people who speak a language speak it the same way. A language can be subdivided into any number of dialects which each vary in some way from the parent language.
Rachel Rosenfeld

Quality of Words, Not Quantity, Is Crucial to Language Skills, Study Finds - 1 views

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    It has been nearly 20 years since a landmark education study found that by age 3, children from low-income families have heard 30 million fewer words than more affluent children, putting them at an educational disadvantage before they even began school. Now, a growing body of research is challenging the notion that merely exposing poor children to more language is enough to overcome the deficits they face. The quality of the communication between children and their parents and caregivers, the researchers say, is of much greater importance than the number of words a child hears.
karunapyle17

English changing so fast there are words majority don't understand - 1 views

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    86 per cent of parents don't understand what their children say via mobile For example 'fleek' means good-looking and 'bae' is an affectionate term Teenagers also rely on emoticons and smiley faces in messages You might think you're gr8 with a little txt speak, but the sorry truth is that these abbreviations are already considered 'antique' by today's children.
anlivaldez17

http://www.smartspeechtherapy.com/is-it-language-disorder-or-learning-disability-a-tuto... - 0 views

This article explains the series of linguistic/comprehension difficulties faced by toddlers and young children with a learning disabilities. A learning disorder does not affect just one area of lea...

language brain learning_disability speech reading writing

started by anlivaldez17 on 15 Dec 15 no follow-up yet
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