(Press-News.org) Fifty years of research has revealed the sad truth that the children of lower-income,
less-educated parents typically enter school with poorer language skills than their more
privileged counterparts. By some measures, 5-year-old children of lower socioeconomic status
(SES) score two years behind on standardized language development tests by the time they enter
school.
In recent years, Anne Fernald, a psychology professor at Stanford University, has
conducted experiments revealing that the language gap between rich and poor children emerges
during infancy. Her work has shown that significant differences in both vocabulary and real-time
language processing efficiency were already evident at age 18 months in English-learning infants
from higher- and lower-SES families. By age 24 months, there was a six-month gap between SES
groups in processing skills critical to language development.
Fernald's work has also
identified one likely cause for this gap. Using special technology to make all-day recordings of
low-SES Spanish-learning children in their home environments, Fernald and her colleagues found
striking variability in how much parents talked to their children. Infants who heard more
child-directed speech developed greater efficiency in language processing and learned new words
more quickly. The results indicate that exposure to child-directed speech – as opposed to
overheard speech – sharpens infants' language processing skills, with cascading benefits for
vocabulary learning.
Fernald and colleagues are now running a parent-education
intervention study with low-income Spanish-speaking mothers in East San Jose, California, funded
by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. This new program, called ¡Habla conmigo! (Talk with Me!),
teaches Latina mothers how they can support their infants' early brain development and helps
them learn new strategies for engaging verbally with their children. Although they only have
data from 32 families so far, the preliminary results are promising. Mothers in the ¡Habla
conmigo! program are communicating more and using higher quality language with their
18-month-olds compared to mothers in a control group.
"What's most exciting," said
Fernald, "is that by 24 months the children of more engaged moms are developing bigger
vocabularies and processing spoken language more efficiently. Our goal is to help parents
understand that by starting in infancy, they can play a role in changing their children's life
trajectories."
INFORMATION:
Fernald will be available for questions during a news briefing on
Thursday, Feb. 13, at 1 p.m. CT at the annual meeting of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science. The AAAS newsroom is on the second floor of the event center in the
Swissôtel Chicago. She will also detail language development in a presentation titled "How
Talking to Children Nurtures Language Development Across SES and Culture" on Friday, Feb. 14,
from 8:30 – 11:30 a.m. CT, at the Hyatt Regency, Columbus room, in Chicago, Ill.
Stanford psychologist shows why talking to kids really matters
2014-02-14
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