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1
The role of the Home Literacy Environment for children's linguistic and socioemotional competencies development in the early years
In: Social Development (2021)
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2
The Home Literacy Environment as a Mediator Between Parental Attitudes Toward Shared Reading and Children’s Linguistic Competencies
In: Frontiers in Psychology (2020)
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3
The Home Literacy Environment as a Mediator Between Parental Attitudes Toward Shared Reading and Children’s Linguistic Competencies
In: Front Psychol (2020)
Abstract: The home learning environment plays an important role for children’s early competencies development. In particular, the early home literacy environment (HLE) that consists of all literacy resources and interactions in a family that support children’s linguistic and literacy learning is closely associated with children’s language comprehension and production. A key aspect of the HLE is shared reading that should start early in children’s life and should be part of a regular routine in the family. However, parental attitudes toward (shared) reading have hardly been analyzed. In this longitudinal study, we analyzed the associations between parental attitudes toward shared reading and children’s linguistic competencies and whether these associations may be mediated by the HLE. Further, we were interested in changes of parental attitudes over time and their association with child and family background characteristics. The sample consisted of N = 133 children with an average age of about 3 years at t1. Children were tested two more times with a 6-month period in-between each assessment. Parental attitudes toward shared reading, socioeconomic status (SES), and the HLE were assessed via parental survey. Children’s sentence comprehension, productive language, and grammar were measured with a standardized test battery. Children whose parents had a more positive attitude toward shared reading not only lived in a greater quality HLE but also performed better in the linguistic tests. In a structural equation model, an indirect effect was found showing that the HLE mediated the effect of parental attitudes on children’s linguistic competencies. Further, parental attitudes toward shared reading did not change significantly across t1 to t3, and a lower score in the SES scale was associated with a less positive attitude toward shared reading. Consequently, parental attitudes toward shared reading seem to be an important basis for individual differences in the quality of the HLE and also for children’s linguistic competencies. As these attitudes vary in the context of different family SES backgrounds, they may be a good target for interventions to support the quality of the HLE and young children’s linguistic learning.
Keyword: Psychology
URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32848999
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7396561/
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01628
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4
The sooner, the better: Early reading to children
In: Sage Open (2016)
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5
Einfluss von "Home Numeracy Environment" auf die mathematische Kompetenzentwicklung vom Vorschulalter bis Ende des 1. Schuljahres
In: Zeitschrift für Familienforschung ; 24 ; 2 ; 134-147 ; Frühe Förderung in der Familie (2015)
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6
Einfluss von „Home Numeracy Environment“ auf die mathematische Kompetenzentwicklung vom Vorschulalter bis Ende des 1. Schuljahres ...
Niklas, Frank; Schneider, Wolfgang. - : Journal of Family Research, 2012
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7
Development of intelligence and thinking
In: Human development from early childhood to early adulthood (New York, 2009), p. 7-34
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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