Tamis-Lemonda Catherine S, Song Lulu, Luo Rufan, Kuchirko Yana, Kahana-Kalman Ronit, Yoshikawa Hirokazu, Raufman Julia
a Department of Applied Psychology , New York University , New York , New York.
Dev Neuropsychol. 2014;39(2):69-87. doi: 10.1080/87565641.2013.827198.
In line with evidence that variation in children's vocabulary size facilitates learning, we asked whether growth in Mexican and Dominican children's expressive vocabularies in English and/or Spanish would predict later cognitive skills. Children and mothers were video-recorded sharing wordless books at 2, 3, 4, and 5 years, and children were assessed on language, literacy, and math skills at 5 years. Growth in children's English and Spanish vocabularies, based on transcriptions of booksharing interactions, predicted specific cognitive skills and was associated with changes to mothers' language use across time. Mothers' years in the United States predicted children's English vocabulary growth.
根据儿童词汇量的差异有助于学习这一证据,我们探讨了墨西哥和多米尼加儿童英语和/或西班牙语表达性词汇量的增长是否能预测其后期的认知技能。我们对2岁、3岁、4岁和5岁的儿童及其母亲分享无字书的过程进行了录像,并在儿童5岁时对其语言、读写和数学技能进行了评估。根据图书分享互动的文字记录,儿童英语和西班牙语词汇量的增长预测了特定的认知技能,并且与母亲语言使用随时间的变化有关。母亲在美国居住的年限预测了儿童英语词汇量的增长。