id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_gcxruwqvwfhytddhpxc6vmdryy Doris R. Entwisle Subcultural Differences in Children's Language Development 1968.0 28 .pdf application/pdf 8823 1719 77 High-speed data-processing equipment has opened the door to cross-cultural study of linguistic development using word associations of children from different social classes and different cultural groups. paper reports subcultural variations in language development for children from 4 to 10 years of age, and speculates upon the socialization This research, which began in 1961, was undertaken partly to provide normative word association data for sizeable groups of young children, and partly to shed light on the course of linguistic development. The Amish, a distinct subcultural group who develop in a considerably different cultural stream from rural Maryland children, reside on farms north of the Maryland-Pennsylvania line (see Fig. 1). 'though the children are of the same age and the same tested intelligence, and are closely matched in terms of schools attended, father's The relative advancement of suburban thirdand fifth-graders compared to inner city children could be owing, at least in part, to differences in school quality. ./cache/work_gcxruwqvwfhytddhpxc6vmdryy.pdf ./txt/work_gcxruwqvwfhytddhpxc6vmdryy.txt