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9 - Spoken language strategies and reading acquisition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Jenny Cook-Gumperz
Affiliation:
University of California, Santa Barbara
Herbert D. Simons
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley
Sandra Murphy
Affiliation:
University of California, Davis
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Summary

Example 9.1

child 1

It looks like a music note … but it has points and it sort of looks like a saucer.

child 2

This one just looks like a … something right here, like this part right here, look like a key. And this right here … looks like a planet … like a ship.

Both of these children are describing an abstract figure in the presence of an adult. They have been told that their description, which is being tape‐recorded, will be heard by one of their classmates, who will have to pick out the figure they are describing from an array of nine abstract figures. Although these descriptions were equally successful in accomplishing the task, they have a number of differences. One of these differences concerns the degree to which they are tied to the temporal and physical situation in which they are produced. The first description is appropriate for written communication, but the other is not.

Communication in oral and written language is different in multiple ways (Rubin 1978; Schallert, Kleiman and Rubin 1977). Speech tends to be multi‐channeled, including lexical–semantic–syntactic, interactional, paralinguistic and nonverbal modes of transmission, while writing is most often unimodal, depending heavily on the lexical–semantic–syntactic channel. Early formulations of oral and written language characterized oral language as having a high degree of interaction and involvement of participants who share the same temporal and spatial context, often in face‐to‐face encounters.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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