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Language, health and aging: notes I

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Title: Language, health and aging: notes I


1
Language, health and aging notes I
  • Course Description
  • Should we use or avoid a simplified speech
    register (Elderspeak) when speaking to older
    people? What are the changes in our language as
    we age? This class gives an overview of the
    literature on language and aging, including
    impaired language, with a focus on enhancing
    communication as part of caregiving. The first
    half of the course will be face-to-face the
    second half will be online, when you will partner
    (via CENTRA) with students in Taiwan who are
    taking a similar course. Cross-listed with
    Gerontology, this course also fulfills
    cross-cultural competencies.
  • Spring, 2006

2
The importance of communication
L.Worrall L. Hickson. 2003. Communication
disability in aging. Delmar, p. 12
3

How older adults use language
L.Worrall L. Hickson. 2003. Communication
disability in aging. Delmar, p. 140
4
Speech/language early development
  • By 3-4 years
  • Integration of content, form, use
  • By 5-6 years
  • Knows the language
  • By 9 years
  • Complex messages
  • Normal aging
  • Few changes in speech language

http//www.childdevelopmentinfo.com/development/la
nguage_development.shtml
5
Pre-school language in use
  • Birth to 2 Parents reactions to non-intentional
    communication lead to
  • Intentional communication
  • Joint attention
  • At 3 independent communication
  • beginning of narration, with descriptions
  • By 4 and 5, speaker adds
  • setting,
  • rehearsal of action

See works by Katharine Nelson and by Robin Fivush
6
Starting school
  • Can sustain longer conversations
  • Knows how to handle
  • shifting topics
  • shifting styles
  • Uses different genres (adds literacy)
  • Begins to use language of persuasion and
    negotiation

Nelson, Fivush, and a run through PsychInfo
7
The adult speaker
  • Integrated content, form and use
  • Discourse incorporates
  • Persuasion
  • Argument
  • Narration
  • Pragmatics crucial for social interaction

Try this quiz http//www.learner.org/discoveringps
ychology/18/e18expand.html
8
Pragmatics how to do things with words
  • Rules for situational use of language
  • What to say when
  • Greetings and similar routines
  • Turn-taking
  • Interruptions and overlaps
  • How to say something
  • And when not to say it

Start here http//www.asha.org/public/speech/deve
lopment/pragmatics.htm
9
Communication and Aging Chapter 1
  • The life span perspective
  • process - do adults think differently? (This is
    what came to the centre of Knowles theory of
    andragogy In pedagogy, the concern is with
    transmitting the content, while in andragogy, the
    concern is with facilitating the acquisition of
    the content.)
  • situations - do adults find themselves in
    different circumstances to other age groups?
  • experiences - does the accumulation of experience
    change things? What difference does having been
    through a greater range of things make?

Nussbaum et al, Ch 1
10
Stages in adulthood
  • Middle adulthood age forty to sixty-five 
  • Midlife transition-forty to forty-five
  • Entering middle adulthood-forty-five to fifty
  • Age fifty transition-fifty to fifty-five
  • Culmination of middle adulthood-fifty-five to
    sixty
  • Late adulthood age sixty on
  • Late adult transition-sixty to sixty-five

L.Worrall L. Hickson. 2003. Communication
disability in aging
11
language strategies
  • Support maintenance of identity and place in the
    larger world
  • Power shifts in relationships with family
  • Power shifts in relationships with friends
  • And a good
    bit more

12
Later we will look at meanings
  • Part of language across the lifespan is our
    learning when and how to privilege specific
    meanings.
  • privileged meanings shape the way we understand
    languagesuch prominent meanings affect our
    linguistic and psycholinguistic behavior in areas
    such as
  • jokes irony
  • metaphors and idioms innovation
  • What is the effect of accessible meanings on
    speech production and comprehension? Giora
    (2003) looks at how, in addition to contextual
    information, salient meanings and sense of words
    and fixed expressions shape our linguistic
    behavior (3)

R. Giora (2003) On our mind Salience, context,
and figurative Language. Oxford UP
13
Learning about theory
  • It is a great relief, though, that the quest for
    truth must always fail, so that any new theory is
    bound to be improved, reversed, or replaced by
    new thinking. (Giora, On Our Mind, viii)

R. Giora (2003) On our mind Salience, context,
and figurative Language. Oxford UP
14
Theories of successful aging stress social
interaction
  • disengagement theorymutual, insuitable (systems
    needs are filled), universal (system disengages
    in order to provide stability)
  • activity theoryresearch findings about
    activities and social relationships that
    contradict disengagement
  • continuity theoryexplains why some disengage,
    others dont, and both can be happy

Nussbaum et al, Ch 1
15
Theories, continued
  • socioemotional selectivity theory keyed to
    social exchange which is basically keyed to the
    notion of tradeoffs in terms of social
    relationships
  • optimize rewards from close personal
    relationships
  • minimize costly interactions with unknowns
  • selective optimizationpropositions by which
    people select, optimize and compensate for the
    losses (such as reserves, physical strenfgth)
  • social-environmental theoryinteraction of person
    with environment and socio-cultural norms that
    define roles and attitudes, which impact relations

Nussbaum et al, Ch 1
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