Department of Medical Social Sciences.
Department of Psychology.
Dev Psychol. 2022 Jan;58(1):32-42. doi: 10.1037/dev0001279. Epub 2021 Dec 9.
Parent-child communication is a rich, multimodal process. Substantial research has documented the communicative strategies in certain (predominantly White) United States families, yet we know little about these communicative strategies in Native American families. The current study addresses that gap by documenting the verbal and nonverbal behaviors used by parents and their 4-year-old children ( = 39, 25 boys) across two communities: Menominee families (low to middle income) living on tribal lands in rural Wisconsin, and non-Native, primarily White families (middle income) living in an urban area. Dyads participated in a free-play forest-diorama task designed to elicit talk and play about the natural world. Children from both communities incorporated actions and gestures freely in their talk, emphasizing the importance of considering nonverbal behaviors when evaluating what children know. In sharp contrast to the stereotype that Native American children talk very little, Menominee children talked than their non-Native counterparts, underlining the importance of taking into account cultural context in child assessments. For children and parents across both communities, gestures were more likely than actions to be related to the content of speech and were more likely than actions to be produced simultaneously with speech. This tight coupling between speech and gesture replicates and extends prior research with predominantly White (and adult) samples. These findings not only broaden our theories of communicative interaction and development, but also provide new evidence about the role of nonverbal behaviors in informal learning contexts. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
亲子沟通是一个丰富的、多模态的过程。大量研究记录了某些(主要是白人)美国家庭的沟通策略,但我们对美国原住民家庭的这些沟通策略知之甚少。本研究通过记录父母和他们 4 岁孩子(=39 名,25 名男孩)在两个社区(威斯康星州农村部落土地上的梅诺米尼族家庭(中低收入)和非原住民、主要是白人家庭(中高收入))使用的言语和非言语行为来填补这一空白。亲子对自由游戏森林立体模型任务进行了参与,该任务旨在引发关于自然世界的谈话和游戏。来自两个社区的孩子都自由地在他们的谈话中加入动作和手势,强调在评估孩子的知识时考虑非言语行为的重要性。与美洲原住民孩子说话很少的刻板印象形成鲜明对比的是,梅诺米尼族孩子比他们的非原住民同龄人说话多,这突显了在儿童评估中考虑文化背景的重要性。对于两个社区的儿童和家长来说,手势比动作更有可能与言语内容相关,并且比动作更有可能与言语同时产生。这种言语和手势之间的紧密结合复制并扩展了以前主要针对白人(和成人)样本的研究。这些发现不仅拓宽了我们对交际互动和发展的理论,还为非言语行为在非正式学习环境中的作用提供了新的证据。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2022 APA,保留所有权利)。