Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, New York University, New York, New York;
Instituto Alfa e Beto, Brasília, Brazil; and.
Pediatrics. 2018 Jan;141(1). doi: 10.1542/peds.2017-0723.
Many children in low- and middle-income countries fail to reach their developmental potential. We sought to determine if a parenting program focused on the promotion of reading aloud enhanced parent-child interactions and child development among low-income families in northern Brazil.
This was a cluster-randomized study of educational child care centers randomly assigned to receive an additional parenting program (intervention) or standard child care without a parenting component (control). Parent-child dyads were enrolled at the beginning of the school year and were assessed at enrollment and at the end of the school year. Families in intervention centers could borrow children's books on a weekly basis and could participate in monthly parent workshops focused on reading aloud. We compared parents and children in intervention and control centers 9 months after the start of the intervention on measures of parent-child interaction and child language, cognitive, and social-emotional development.
Five hundred and sixty-six parent-child dyads (279 intervention; 287 control) in 12 child care clusters (26-76 children per cluster) were assessed at enrollment; 464 (86%) contributed follow-up data. Parents in the intervention group engaged in significantly greater cognitive stimulation (Cohen's = 0.43) and higher quantity and quality of reading interactions ( = 0.52-0.57) than controls; children in the intervention scored significantly higher than controls on receptive vocabulary ( = 0.33), working memory ( = 0.46), and IQ ( = 0.33).
An innovative program focused on the promotion of parent-child reading aloud resulted in benefits to parent-child interactions and to child language and cognitive development that were greater than those provided by educational child care alone. This promising approach merits further evaluation at scale.
许多中低收入国家的儿童未能充分发挥其发展潜力。我们旨在确定一项专注于促进大声朗读的育儿计划是否能提高巴西北部低收入家庭的亲子互动和儿童发展。
这是一项教育儿童保育中心的集群随机研究,这些中心被随机分配接受额外的育儿计划(干预组)或没有育儿部分的标准儿童保育(对照组)。在学年开始时,招募亲子二人组进行评估,并在入学时和学年结束时进行评估。干预中心的家庭可以每周借阅儿童书籍,并可以参加每月一次的家长研讨会,重点是大声朗读。我们比较了干预组和对照组的父母和儿童在干预开始 9 个月后在亲子互动和儿童语言、认知和社会情感发展方面的情况。
在 12 个儿童保育组(每组 26-76 名儿童)中的 566 对亲子(279 名干预组;287 名对照组)在入学时进行了评估;464 名(86%)提供了随访数据。干预组的父母在认知刺激方面表现出明显更大的作用(Cohen's = 0.43),并且在阅读互动的数量和质量方面更高(= 0.52-0.57);干预组的儿童在接受性词汇(= 0.33)、工作记忆(= 0.46)和智商(= 0.33)方面的得分明显高于对照组。
一项专注于促进亲子大声朗读的创新计划带来了亲子互动以及儿童语言和认知发展的益处,其效果优于单纯的教育儿童保育。这种有希望的方法值得进一步在更大规模上进行评估。