Assistance of social and cognitive development that connects the child in
relation to the world around him in order to acquire a base of language for
their learning process.
Socially, children communicate
about themselves in
relationships to their
enviroment, (See Slobin 2004)
Social Intentions
Children with Neuro-typical
development begin to express
that they "know", refer to a
variety of things and do not
just accept, reject, denying,
negating, etc.
(Arwood, 1991a) Children
express a semantic intent of
concepts they learn according
to the society that surrounds
them and, therefore they are of
a pragmatic nature.
Extended Semantic Relationships
A baby begins to receive, organize and express
functions with significant patterns, throughout
childhood the child begins to increase accuracy
when trying to communicate.
"Refer" This act allows the speaker to be clear and specific when
communicating, so the social development of the child depends
on the parallel expansion with everything that surrounds him.
Preoperational Cognition
The child learns to relate more with others and
develops their social and cognitive capacity.
Expanded Language Functions
The child expands his
language and learns to
think critically and solve
problems so that the
function of the language
is developed by:
Displacement
The child understands
the function of
communicating
without the need for
the other person to
be present, for
example: Calls, chats,
emails, etc.
Semanticity
Acquisition of
new concepts
and meanings
that develop a
semantic
complexity and
help the child to
call lexical
labels.
Flexibility
Is the language
to think about
the various
options
available when
solving or
facing a
situation.
Productivity
Flexibility,
displacement and
semantic, increase
the capacity for
variety in language
to be more
productive and have
maximum use of
expanded language
functions
Redundancy
This factor is
important because
it is where the
student learns to
express their ideas
and use more
words to convey
the same
meaning.