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Personal narrative as a ‘breeding ground’ for higher-order thinking talk in early parent-child interactions
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In: Dev Psychol (2021)
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The Origins of Higher-Order Thinking Lie in Children’s Spontaneous Talk Across the Pre-School Years
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In: Cognition (2020)
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Language development and brain reorganization in a child born without the left hemisphere
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In: Cortex (2020)
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Parents’ early book reading to children: Relation to children’s later language and literacy outcomes controlling for other parent language input
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Abstract:
It is widely believed that reading to preschool children promotes their language and literacy skills. Yet, whether early parent-child book reading is an index of generally rich linguistic input or a unique predictor of later outcomes remains unclear. To address this question, we asked whether naturally occurring parent-child book reading interactions between 1 and 2.5 years-of-age predict elementary school language and literacy outcomes, controlling for the quantity of other talk parents provide their children, family socioeconomic status, and children’s own early language skill. We find that the quantity of parent-child book reading interactions predicts children’s later receptive vocabulary, reading comprehension, and internal motivation to read (but not decoding, external motivation to read, or math skill), controlling for these other factors. Importantly, we also find that parent language that occurs during book reading interactions is more sophisticated than parent language outside book reading interactions in terms of vocabulary diversity and syntactic complexity.
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Article
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/desc.12764 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30325107 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6927670/
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Resilience in mathematics after early brain injury: The roles of parental input and early plasticity
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Vocabulary, syntax, and narrative development in typically developing children and children with early unilateral brain injury: Early parental talk about the there-and-then matters
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New Evidence About Language and Cognitive Development Based on a Longitudinal Study: Hypotheses for Intervention
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A tale of two hands: Children's early gesture use in narrative production predicts later narrative structure in speech
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Narrative Processing in Typically Developing Children and Children with Early Unilateral Brain Injury: Seeing Gesture Matters
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Gesturing with an Injured Brain: How Gesture Helps Children with Early Brain Injury Learn Linguistic Constructions
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In: Psychology Faculty Publications (2013)
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Gesturing with an injured brain: How gesture helps children with early brain injury learn linguistic constructions
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Children’s spatial thinking: Does talk about the spatial world matter?
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Learning what children know about space from looking at their hands: The added value of gesture in spatial communication
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Some types of parent number talk count more than others: Relations between parents’ input and children’s cardinal-number knowledge
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What counts in the development of young children’s number knowledge?
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Narrative Skill in Children with Early Unilateral Brain Injury: A Possible Limit to Functional Plasticity
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What counts in the development of young children's number knowledge?
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Left hemisphere regions are critical for language in the face of early left focal brain injury
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