Reading Passage 3
language learning should depend on the child’s age and level of mental development when
he or she starts learning a language. Under the stages-of-language hypothesis, however, it
shouldn’t depend on such patterns, but only on the completion of previous stages.
In 2007, researchers at Harvard University, who were studying the two theories, found a
clever way to test them. More than 20,000 internationally adopted
children enter the US
each year. Many of them no longer hear their birth language after they arrive, and they
must learn English more or less the same way infants do - that is, by listening and by trial
and error. International adoptees don’t take classes or use a dictionary when they are
learning their new tongue and most of them don’t have a well-developed first language.
All of these factors make them an ideal population in which
to test these competing
hypotheses about how language is learned.
Neuroscientists Jesse Snedeker, Joy Geren and Carissa Shafto studied the language
development of 27 children adopted from China between the ages of two and five years.
These children began learning English at an older age than US natives and had more
mature brains with which to tackle the task. Even so, just as with American-born infants,
their first English sentences consisted of single words and were largely bereft of function
words, word endings and verbs. The adoptees then went through the same stages as
typical Americanborn children, albeit at a faster clip. The adoptees
and native children
started combining words in sentences when their vocabulary reached the same sizes,
further suggesting that what matters is not how old you are or how mature your brain is,
but the number of words you know.
This finding - that having more mature brains did not help the adoptees avoid the toddler-
talk stage - suggests that babies speak in babytalk not because they have baby brains, but
because they have only just started learning and need time to gain enough vocabulary to
be able to expand their conversations.
Before long, the one-word stage will give way to the
two-word stage and so on. Learning how to chat like an adult is a gradual process.
But this potential answer also raises an even older and more difficult question. Adult
immigrants who learn a second language rarely achieve the same proficiency in a
foreign language as the average child raised as a native speaker. Researchers have
long suspected there is a “critical period’ for language development, after which it cannot
proceed with full success to fluency. Yet we still do not understand this
critical period or
know why it ends.
Day 3
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in the reading passage?
In boxes 27-30 on your answer sheet, write
Questions 27 -30
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