Does improving joint attention in low-quality child-care enhance language development?

Autor: Rudd, Loretta C., Cain, David W., Saxon, Terrill F.
Předmět:
Zdroj: Early Child Development & Care; Apr2008, Vol. 178 Issue 3, p315-338, 24p, 1 Black and White Photograph, 6 Charts
Abstrakt: This study examined effects of professional development for child-care staff on language acquisition of children ages 14-36 months. Child-care staff from 44 child-care centres agreed to participate in the study. Child-care staff from one-half of the child-care centres were randomly assigned to a one-time, four-hour workshop followed by three classroom visits over the subsequent three months. This treatment was designed to increase frequency and quality of joint attention episodes between the child-care staff and the toddlers. Child-care staff from the remaining 22 centres were assigned to a wait-list control group. Toddlers (N = 121) in both the groups (ntreatment = 64; ncontrol = 57) were assessed with a measure of language acquisition after six months. While there were no significant differences on total language acquisition between groups, treatment group toddlers whose child-care providers engaged in more frequent and longer bouts of joint attention acquired more language. The results of this study support that when child-care staff engage in longer and higher quality bouts of joint attention with toddlers they can affect language acquisition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index