School of Psychology, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland.
School of Psychology, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2023 Dec;236:105746. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2023.105746. Epub 2023 Aug 2.
Children's literacy and numeracy skills are fundamental for early academic performance and later academic success, mental health, and employment prospects in adulthood. Given that parents play a key role in promoting child development, identifying early parenting behaviors that predict literacy and numeracy skills is a research imperative. Emerging evidence suggests that parental use of decontextualized language (DL)-talk that requires cognitive abstraction and transcends the here and now-predicts children's literacy skills. However, its relation to numeracy remains underexplored. Accordingly, the current study examined how DL during interaction with children in infancy (T) and preschool years (T) relates to child literacy and numeracy in middle childhood (T). Participants were 26 Irish mother-father-child triads (16 female children). At T and T, participants engaged in 5-min interactions that were coded for DL. At T, child literacy and numeracy were assessed using the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Fourth Edition and teacher report of child scores on national standardized tests. Controlling for child age and contextualized utterances, child reading in middle childhood was negatively related to maternal and child DL in infancy but was positively related to DL during preschool years, suggesting that the benefits of DL may become apparent later in development. Mothers', fathers', and children's DL during preschool years was also positively linked with child numeracy in middle childhood. Thus, embedding DL in conversation with children may have positive domain-specific and cross-domain effects on children's literacy and numeracy performance. Findings provide incentive for future research to examine relations between DL and children's school performance across a wider range of developmental domains.
儿童的读写和计算能力是早期学业表现和以后学业成功、心理健康以及成年后就业前景的基础。鉴于父母在促进儿童发展方面发挥着关键作用,确定哪些早期的育儿行为可以预测读写和计算能力是研究的当务之急。新出现的证据表明,父母使用非语境化语言(DL)——需要认知抽象并超越此时此地的谈话——可以预测儿童的读写能力。然而,它与计算能力的关系仍未得到充分探索。因此,本研究考察了儿童在婴儿期(T1)和学前期(T2)与父母互动时的 DL 如何与儿童在儿童中期(T3)的读写和计算能力相关。参与者为 26 个爱尔兰母子三人组(16 名女性儿童)。在 T1 和 T2 时,参与者进行了 5 分钟的互动,这些互动内容被编码为 DL。在 T3 时,使用韦氏儿童智力量表第四版和教师报告的儿童在国家标准化测试中的分数来评估儿童的读写和计算能力。控制儿童年龄和语境化话语后,儿童在儿童中期的阅读能力与婴儿期母亲和儿童的 DL 呈负相关,但与学前期的 DL 呈正相关,这表明 DL 的益处可能在以后的发展中显现出来。母亲、父亲和孩子在学前期的 DL 也与儿童在儿童中期的计算能力呈正相关。因此,在与孩子的对话中嵌入 DL 可能对孩子的读写和计算能力表现产生特定领域和跨领域的积极影响。研究结果为未来的研究提供了动力,这些研究将在更广泛的发展领域中考察 DL 与儿童学校表现之间的关系。