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Exploring the Role of "in the Moment" and Global Caregiver and Child Factors in Caregiver Questioning During Shared Book Viewing

Overview
Journal Cogn Dev
Specialty Pediatrics
Date 2023 Jun 12
PMID 37304896
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Abstract

Questions of high (vs. low) cognitive demand (CD), which encourage children to engage in abstract or critical thinking (e.g., problem solve, reason about cause-and-effect relations, make inferences), may drive relations between children's language exposure and early skills. The present study adopted a micro-analytic approach to examine caregivers' high-CD questioning with their preschool-aged children while viewing a wordless picture book ( = 121) and "in the moment" (e.g., interaction time, child responses) and global factors (e.g., caregiver education). The probability of caregivers' high-CD questioning increased with interaction time and caregiver education. Post-hoc exploratory analyses revealed that the relation between children's responses and caregivers' high-CD questioning depended on caregivers' perceptions of children's vocabulary skills. Specifically, the probability of caregivers' subsequent high-CD questioning was greater if their child did not respond previously and if caregivers perceived them to have high vocabulary skills. In contrast, caregivers' questioning remained relatively constant for responsive children across different vocabulary skills. Thus, caregivers may employ certain types of input during brief, informal learning interactions with their children by considering their own and their child's propensities and micro-level changes that occur during their conversations.

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Young children's science learning from narrative books: The role of text cohesion and caregivers' extratextual talk.

Miller-Goldwater H, Hanft M, Miller A, Bauer P J Cogn Dev. 2024; 25(3):323-349.

PMID: 38799764 PMC: 11115124. DOI: 10.1080/15248372.2023.2267229.

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