Introduction
For my English Language investigation, I
will be looking at Children’s Language Acquisition, in particular, the
developing language complexity of children’s books, specifically the Oxford
Reading Tree graded reading scheme. Language becomes increasingly difficult as
children progress through the reading schemes; therefore I will compare how
language complexity occurs. I believe that I will find significant variety between
the sentence and overall book length, grammar, vocabulary used and complexity
of consonant clusters as the books progress.
Hypothesis
I hypothesise that as the reading scheme
books progress, there will be a gradual increase in the complexity of the
following features:
·
Sentence length
(as children become more familiar with sentence formation)
·
Overall book
length (when their attention span increases)
·
Grammar (more
complex, concrete nouns, adjectives and verb tenses)
·
Vocabulary (wider
range of words used to broaden a child’s vocabulary)
·
Repetition of
words (this will allow them to learn their meanings faster [1])
·
Consonant
clusters (more difficult to develop the letter-sound relationship)
Methodology
I have chosen a selection of books from the
Oxford Reading Tree scheme because these books are used nationwide to teach
children to read. I have selected the Magic Key book series as these books are
iconic and well-known as they follow the adventures of Biff, Chip and Kipper.
“These books were first published in 1985 and there are now over 300 stories
which form part
of an English language syllabus in line with the National Curriculum, designed
to help children learn to speak and read Standard English.” [2]
There are no ethical issues with gathering
this data as it is part of a public domain and therefore already accessible to
a wider audience. The books I have chosen will be a representative sample owing
to them being a part of a nationwide reading scheme, used in over “80% of
schools” [2]. I have chosen six
books, three traditional Biff, Chip and Kipper books and three decode and
develop Biff, Chip and Kipper books. There is one traditional and one
contemporary book from each colour band, yellow, blue and green.
For my secondary research, I will
predominantly use search engines to research about how reading schemes become
more complex in their formation to assist children’s reading progression within
school. I will also use examples from relevant theories, such as imitation from
Skinner’s behaviourist theory and the notion of language scaffolding from
Vygotsky to explain hoe language gradually develops. Piaget’s use of
stimulation will also be explored in the graphology of the book. I shall also
access scholarly articles and books focusing on how language in children’s
books becomes more complex as they learn to read. I will need this information
to understand how reading schemes work and to understand why the progressions
occur in that particular order, such as the length of sentences increasing
before vocabulary. Once I have this secondary data, I will ensure that I have a
sample of data from a variety of mediums and that I only include relevant
details in my actual investigation. I plan to use the “method” structure for
analysing my data, for example, I will analyse the sentence length each book
before moving on to grammar.
Hi Gemma - i'm literally just finishing my coursework and its about reading schemes as well which is so nice to read this and know u did it on the same thing!!! I'm quite stuck at the moment and I was wondering if you would mind if i saw your final thing??? just to help me with mine, don't worry if not, i know it's a massive ask! my email is ellamtprice@icloud.com look forward to hearing from you!
ReplyDelete