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The development of discourse referencing in Cantonese-speaking children

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 November 2004

ANITA M.-Y. WONG
Affiliation:
University of Hong Kong
JUDITH R. JOHNSTON
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia

Abstract

The ability to make clear reference in connected discourse was examined in children learning Cantonese, a Chinese language where noun phrase constituents, whatever their grammatical role, are omissible from sentences under discourse conditions that are not well-understood. Forty-three typically developing children aged 3;0, 5;0, 7;0 and 12;0 told 16 stories based on picture sequences. A panel of adult native Cantonese speakers was asked to judge the referential adequacy of each child's stories by identifying the character the child was talking about in 32 targeted referential acts. The targeted acts were of three sorts: MAINTENANCE of a known character, INTRODUCTION of a second new character, and REINTRODUCTION of a known character. Reference was judged to be adequate when 3 out of 4 ‘listeners’ could successfully identify the character. Children's referential expressions were most adequate for Maintenance, less adequate for Introduction, and least adequate for Reintroduction. The twelve- and seven-year-olds approached ceiling on all three functions. The five-year-olds scored poorly on Reintroduction, and the three-year-olds failed both Introduction and Reintroduction, despite knowledge of at least one of the possible linguistic forms required for these acts as evidenced in a sentence imitation task. Viewed within the framework of Levelt's (1989) discourse model, the data improve our understanding of the developmental period during which children learn to make appropriate presuppositions about the listener's knowledge and attentional states.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2004 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

This research is based on the first author's doctoral dissertation, completed under the supervision of the second author. D. Geoffrey Hall and Carolyn Johnson offered invaluable and much appreciated suggestions at all stages of the project. The authors would also like to thank Cliff Mok for the story illustrations, Astrid Lau and Isabel Chan for their transcription of the stories, and the twelve Cantonese speakers for scoring the transcripts. Finally, this project would not have been possible without the participation of the children, and the support of their families and schools. We thank them all.