<HTML><FONT FACE=arial,helvetica><FONT SIZE=2>Hello all -
<BR>
<BR>I'm Cynthia Core, mother of a recently adopted one-year-old from China. I'm a doctoral candidate in Speech-Language Pathology at the University of Florida, and I received the following question from one of the parents I traveled with. I have some ideas about responding to her, but I was very curious to see what this particular group of researchers would have to offer.
<BR>
<BR><<Here is a question - how consistent should I be in word selection? I
<BR>know to do what I consider basics very consistently, but in regular
<BR>conversation we choose different words for the same thing all the
<BR>time (I don't have good examples in mind right now, but some are
<BR>little differences - like TV v. television or Bike v Bicycle - and
<BR>some are bigger - synonyms, for example. Also, tense changes - so
<BR>words sound different - some more than others. I keep thinking that
<BR>this child that needs to build a vocabulary from scratch will be
<BR>confused and her understanding will be slowed when natural language
<BR>variations occur.
<BR>
<BR>I would appreciate any input that you all can offer. Also, I would like any leads on researchers who are currently addressing the issue of language change in children adopted from non-English speaking countries.
<BR>Thank you.
<BR>Cynthia Core</FONT></HTML>