Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Part I Theoretical and Biological Foundations
- Part II Language, Communication, Social Cognition, and Awareness
- 5 Talking and Thinking: The Role of Speech in Social Understanding
- 6 Private Speech and Theory of Mind: Evidence for Developing Interfunctional Relations
- 7 Development of Communicative Competence through Private and Inner Speech
- 8 Private Speech in the Framework of Referential Communication
- 9 Preschool Children's Speech Awareness and Theory of Speech
- 10 Young Children's Knowledge about Overt and Covert Private Speech
- Part III Symbols and Tools throughout the Life Span
- Part IV Motivational and Educational Applications
- Index
- References
9 - Preschool Children's Speech Awareness and Theory of Speech
from Part II - Language, Communication, Social Cognition, and Awareness
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Part I Theoretical and Biological Foundations
- Part II Language, Communication, Social Cognition, and Awareness
- 5 Talking and Thinking: The Role of Speech in Social Understanding
- 6 Private Speech and Theory of Mind: Evidence for Developing Interfunctional Relations
- 7 Development of Communicative Competence through Private and Inner Speech
- 8 Private Speech in the Framework of Referential Communication
- 9 Preschool Children's Speech Awareness and Theory of Speech
- 10 Young Children's Knowledge about Overt and Covert Private Speech
- Part III Symbols and Tools throughout the Life Span
- Part IV Motivational and Educational Applications
- Index
- References
Summary
This chapter reviews the current research on children's awareness and theory of speech. Theory of speech, a relatively new construct largely introduced here, refers to one's beliefs and hypotheses about how speech can be used and what it can be used for. For example, speech can be used with different volumes (out loud, whisper, silent), for different purposes (communication, fantasy play, self-regulation, thought), or to different people (self, other, supernatural/spiritual figure). Several decades of research (see Berk, 1992; Winsler, Chapter 1 of this volume) support the notion that children use speech in new and different ways (from social, other-directed communication to inner, silent thought) as they progress through the early childhood years. The construct, theory of speech, has been postulated to represent one's ever-changing understanding of, or perspective on, the various types of speech used by individuals. As such, theory of speech represents one's mental understanding of how speech can be used, which might be the impetus for young children to use speech in more purposeful and regulatory ways.
Like other areas of mental understanding (e.g., theory of mind), children's understanding of what they can do with and how they can use speech (i.e., theory of speech) likely evolves through the early childhood years (Manfra & Winsler, 2006). It has been speculated (e.g., Manfra & Winsler, 2006; Winsler & Naglieri, 2003) that the developmental process of theory of speech is related to the developmental changes seen in children's actual speech use.
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- Private Speech, Executive Functioning, and the Development of Verbal Self-Regulation , pp. 134 - 142Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009