Sometime between 15 and 24 months, many children experience a ‘word spurt’. This article explains research into how and why children start learning words so quickly around this age.
If you’ve spent much time around a baby, you’ve probably had conversations like this:
During the first year of life, conversations with Briana usually follow a pattern. Mum and dad point to different objects and say ‘flower’, ‘cat’ or ‘balloon’. Briana looks and makes a cooing noise or babbles in a way that begins to sound like words. Then, around the time she turns one, it finally happens. Briana says her first real word. And for the next six months or so, Briana slowly builds her vocabulary as she practises saying words over and over again.
Sometime around 18 months, her parents notice an amazing change. Briana not only looks at the objects being pointed out to her, but she also starts naming them after hearing them only once or twice. ‘Book’, ‘dog’, ‘truck’, ‘keys’, she says. She even tries out an entirely new phrase. ‘What’s that?’ she asks, pointing at a helicopter. ‘What’s that?’ she demands, waving towards a tree.
Suddenly, it seems like the questions never stop coming. More than that, Briana remembers the answers. What used to take weeks of patient repetition now seems to take only one quick reply. It’s a ball, a cat, or a biscuit and she doesn’t need to be told twice.
Sometime between the ages of 15-24 months, many children experience what researchers call a ‘word spurt’:
Researchers have noted that the words learned during a spurt are often names of objects, though this is not always true, especially in other cultures and languages. But whether the words are names or not, researchers are learning why they suddenly start coming fast when children are about 18 months old.
Children use special strategies to learn language. For example, one experiment tested the ability of 16-20-month-olds to learn new words after hearing them just once. This is something researchers call ‘fast mapping’:
At some point, children learn that ‘new’ words refer to ‘new’ objects, even when nobody points them out for them.
The researchers found that the children who could learn words this way had bigger vocabularies than those who couldn’t. This meant that these children had probably gone through a word spurt. A follow-up study of the children who originally could not learn words this way showed that once their vocabularies had grown, they too could learn by fast mapping.
So how do children develop the ability to learn a word after hearing it only once?
Some researchers think that children gain new insights into words and language when they are around 18 months old. Most believe that children come to two realisations: words are names for objects and every object has a name. Scientists call this new understanding the ‘naming insight’.
In addition, some scientists think that when young children realise that all objects have names, they also begin sorting objects that are similar into categories. In one experiment, children were shown a pile of eight objects, with four objects of one type (like small plastic boxes) and four objects of another type (four balls). Then the researchers watched what these same children did from ages 15 months to about 20 months.
At around 16 months, many of the children would point to all the balls or all the boxes, and some would put all items of one type together. But by 17-18 months, the children would make two separate piles, one with the balls and one with the boxes (this experiment also used different types of items such as dolls and cars).
With this in mind, try the following:
Sometimes, delays in communication skills can be signs of more serious developmental disorders or delay, including language delay, hearing impairment, developmental delay, intellectual disability and autism.
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