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Written and Spoken Language Development across the Lifespan: Essays in Honour of Liliana Tolchinsky PDF

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Literacy Studies: Perspectives from Cognitive Neurosciences, Linguistics, Psychology and Education Joan Perera Melina Aparici Elisa Rosado Naymé Salas Editors Written and Spoken Language Development across the Lifespan Essays in Honour of Liliana Tolchinsky Literacy Studies Volume 11 Series Editor R. Malatesha Joshi, Texas A&M University, USA Editorial Board Linnea Ehri, CUNY Graduate School, USA George Hynd, Purdue University, USA Richard Olson, University of Colorado, USA Pieter Reitsma, Vrije University Amsterdam, The Netherlands Rebecca Treiman, Washington University in St. Louis, USA Usha Goswami, University of Cambridge, UK Jane Oakhill, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK Philip Seymour, University of Dundee, UK Guinevere Eden, Georgetown University Medical Center, USA Catherine McBride Chang, Chinese University of Hong Kong, China While language defi nes humanity, literacy defi nes civilization. Understandably, illiteracy or diffi culties in acquiring literacy skills have become a major concern of our technological society. A conservative estimate of the prevalence of literacy problems would put the fi gure at more than a billion people in the world. Because of the seriousness of the problem, research in literacy acquisition and its breakdown is pursued with enormous vigor and persistence by experts from diverse backgrounds such as cognitive psychology, neuroscience, linguistics and education. This, of course, has resulted in a plethora of data, and consequently it has become diffi cult to integrate this abundance of information into a coherent body because of the artifi cial barriers that exist among different professional specialties. The purpose of this series is to bring together the available research studies into a coherent body of knowledge. Publications in this series are of interest to educators, clinicians and research scientists in the above-mentioned specialties. Some of the titles suitable for the Series are: fMRI, brain imaging techniques and reading skills, orthography and literacy; and research based techniques for improving decoding, vocabulary, spelling, and comprehension skills. More information about this series at h ttp://www.springer.com/series/7206 Joan Perera • Melina Aparici Elisa Rosado • Naymé Salas Editors Written and Spoken Language Development across the Lifespan Essays in Honour of Liliana Tolchinsky Editors Joan Perera Melina Aparici Departament de Didàctica de la D epartament de Psicologia Bàsica, Llengua i la Literatura Evolutiva i de l’Educació U niversitat de Barcelona U niversitat Autònoma de Barcelona Barcelona , Spain Barcelona , Spain Elisa Rosado Naymé Salas D epartament de Didàctica de la D epartament de Didàctica de la Llengua Llengua i la Literatura i la Literatura, i de les Ciències Socials Universitat de Barcelona Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Barcelona , Spain Barcelona , Spain ISSN 2214-000X ISSN 2214-0018 (electronic) Literacy Studies ISBN 978-3-319-21135-0 ISBN 978-3-319-21136-7 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-21136-7 Library of Congress Control Number: 2015957060 Springer Cham Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016 T his work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifi cally the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfi lms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. T he use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specifi c statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. T he publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. Printed on acid-free paper S pringer International Publishing AG Switzerland is part of Springer Science+Business Media ( w ww.springer.com ) Photo courtesy of Eduardo Landsmann Personal Tributes The Human Print-Out Facility: A Tribute to Liliana Tolchinsky-Landsmann Annette Karmiloff-Smith Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, Department of Psychological Sciences Birkbeck, University of London London, UK e-mail: [email protected] O n a lecture tour at Tel Aviv University in the late 1970s, I discovered an amazing, trilingual doctoral student – Liliana Tolchinsky-Landsmann – who was subse- quently to become a lifelong friend as well as a wonderful collaborator on what I then called “the human print-out facility.” Unlike other species, humans use exter- nal memory devices in the form of drawings, maps, diagrams, writing, and other types of notation to leave an external trace of their internal representations, both as an aid to their own memory and to communicate information to other social beings. Liliana and I shared a deep interest in this issue (Karmiloff-Smith, 1979a, b, 1990, 1996; Tolchinsky-Landsmann, 1990, 1991; Tolchinsky-Landsman and Levin, 1985; Levin and Tolchinsky-Landsmann, 1989), both epistemologically and psychologi- cally, so it was a natural extension of our budding friendship also to become intel- lectual collaborators with a strong commitment to developmental approaches. We both recognized the importance of understanding very early precursors to reading and writing – not more obvious factors like grapheme-phoneme mapping, but how very young infants/toddlers process the rich world of notations that perme- ate their environments. What do such young children know about those notational environments, long before they start learning to read or write? Liliana and I shared a fascination with such questions. The result was a postdoctoral visit by Liliana to the UK in which we carried out a joint study showing how very young children are already sensitive to the different constraints that hold for letter strings to be “good vii viii Personal Tributes for reading” and numerical strings to be “good for counting” and how they differen- tiate both from drawing – achievements that toddlers have well before they have learned to read letters or numbers (Tolchinsky-Landsmann & Karmiloff-Smith, 1992, 1993). We made what I still consider to be a critical distinction between nota- tions as domains of knowledge and notations as referential-communicative tools. While children learn about the latter in school, the former constitutes part of their spontaneous and very early exploration of their notational environments. Liliana taught me so much about this rich domain of enquiry, which led me sub- sequently to encourage one of my doctoral students to work in the fi eld of notational development (Bolger and Karmiloff-Smith, 1990) and led me to further collabora- tions with other researchers (Lee and Karmiloff-Smith, 1996a, b; Lee, et al. 1998). And, of course, Liliana herself took the fi eld of the development of notational sys- tems much further in her subsequent work in Barcelona (Tolchinsky-Landsmann 2001, 2003). Moreover, as the fi eld of developmental psychology becomes increas- ingly interdisciplinary, we are now witnessing brain-imagining studies that corrobo- rate at the neural level (Heimann et al. 2013) the intuitions that Liliana was developing at the cognitive level over two decades earlier. I t is my great pleasure and honor to have been invited to write this brief apprecia- tion of the work of this exceptional scholar and very special personal friend, Liliana Tolchinsky-Landsmann. References Bolger, F., & Karmiloff-Smith, A. (1990). The development of communicative competence: are notational systems like language? Archives de Psychologie , 58 , 257–273. H eimann, K., Umilta, M. A., & Gallese, V. (2013). How the motor-cortex distinguishes among letters, unknown symbols and scribbles. A high density EEG study. Neuropsychologia, 51, 2833 – 2840. Karmiloff-Smith, A. (1979a). Problem-solving processes in children’s construction and represen- tations of closed railway circuits. Archives de Psychologie , XVII, 3–59. Karmiloff-Smith, A. (1979b). Micro- and macro-developmental changes in language acquisition and other representational systems. C ognitive Science, 3 (2), 91–118. Karmiloff-Smith, A. (1990). Constraints on representational change: Evidence from children’s drawing. C ognition , 34 , 1–27. Karmiloff-Smith, A. (1996). Internal and external representational change: a developmental per- spective. In D. M Peterson (Eds.), Alternative representations: An interdisciplinary theme in cognitive science . Bristol: Intellect Books. Lee, K., & Karmiloff-Smith, A. (1996a). The development of cognitive constraints on notations. Archives de Psychologie , 64 , 3–25. L ee, K., & Karmiloff-Smith, A. (1996b). Notational Development: The use of symbols. In E. C. Carterette & M. P. Friedman (Eds.), H andbook of Perception, Vol. 13 Perceptual and Cognitive Development (pp. 185–211). (R. Gelman & T. Au (Eds.)). New York: Academic Press. Lee, K., Karmiloff-Smith, A., Cameron, C.A., & Dodsworth, P. (1998). Notational adaptation in children. C anadian Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 30 , 159–171. L evin, I. & Tolchinsky-Landsmann, L. (1989). Becoming literate: Referential and phonetic strate- gies in early reading and writing. International Journal of Behavioral Development , 1 2 (3), 369–384. Personal Tributes ix T olchinsky-Landsmann, L. (1990). Early writing development: Evidence from different ortho- graphic systems. In M. Spoolders (Eds.), L iteracy acquisition. Norwood: Ablex. Tolchinsky-Landsmann, L. (Ed.). (1991). C ulture, schooling and psychological development. Norwood: Ablex. Tolchinsky-Landsmann, L. (2001). D evelopmental aspects in learning to write. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic. T olchinsky-Landsmann, L. (2003). T he cradle of culture and what children know about writing and numbers before being taught. Mahwah: Erlbaum. Tolchinsky-Landsmann, L., & Karmiloff-Smith, A. (1992). Children’s understanding of notations as domains of knowledge versus referential-communicative tools. Cognitive Development , 7 , 287–300. Tolchinsky-Landsmann, L., & Karmiloff-Smith, A. (1993). Las restricciones del conocimiento notacional. Aprendizaje y Infancia, 62/63 , 19–51. Tolchinsky-Landsmann, L., & Levin, I. (1985). Writing in preschoolers: An age- related analysis. Applied Psycholinguistics, 6 (3), 319 – 339. Tribute to Liliana Batia Seroussi Levinsky College of Education Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel e-mail: [email protected] I feel very honored and privileged to participate in this book and to be given the opportunity to thank Liliana for her inspiration and innovative ideas that no doubt contributed to shaping my identity as a clinician and a researcher. A s a young speech and language clinician in the mid-1980s in Israel, I was very lucky to hear Liliana’s pioneering lectures on emergent literacy. She literally revealed a whole new world to me – the fascinating world of ideas, theories, and conceptions that untutored children develop about writing before they begin formal schooling. Years later in 2012, after the completion of my PhD, when Liliana agreed to guide me and to accept me as a collaborator in her ongoing research, I had a feel- ing that I was coming full circle. During the years of my early professional career as a speech and language clini- cian and later on, when I, a relatively “late bloomer,” entered into the academic arena of psycholinguistics, Liliana’s publications guided me and served as a sort of a frame of reference for me. These publications, including research articles, position papers, books, and textbooks, both in English and in Spanish, demonstrate a wide scope of domains of interest – in theory as well as practice, in early and later lan- guage development, and on the interaction between literacy and other linguistic areas. Liliana’s fi ngerprints are quite noticeable in the publications that I have read, revealing deep psycholinguistic knowledge incorporated in a humanistic and well- grounded point of view that integrates all aspects of linguistics. I will refer specifi - cally to three publications that inspired me (in chronological order): the position paper written with Dorit Ravid “Developing linguistic literacy: a comprehensive

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This multidisciplinary volume offers insights on oral and written language development and how it takes place in literate societies. The volume covers topics from early to late language development, its interaction with literacy practices, including several languages, monolingual and multilingual co
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