Abstract

Children from low SES backgrounds hear, on average, fewer words at home than those from high SES backgrounds. This word gap is associated with widening achievement differences in children’s language abilities and school readiness. However relatively little is known about adult and child speech in childcare settings, in which approximately 30% of American children are enrolled. We examined the influence of teacher and peer language input on children’s in-class language use and language development in an intervention classroom for low-SES, high-risk 2- to 3-year-olds. Over the course of a year, day-long recordings of the classroom were collected weekly with LENA recorders. Using LENA software algorithms, we found that language input from peers was positively related to children’s in-class language use, both in-the-moment and over the course of each day, as were the number of conversational turns in which children and teachers engaged Both peer input and conversational turns with teachers were also positively related to children’s language development rates, as indexed by increases in vocabulary size. Together these results indicate the importance of child-specific rates of classroom language input in the language development of high-risk, preschoolers.

Highlights

  • Language input from caregivers has cascading consequences for child development

  • We looked to the research on language input from parents to guide our predictions about which language experiences might matter in the classroom

  • We examine whether language input and use relate to language development, as measured by changes in children’s vocabulary size

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Summary

Introduction

Language input from caregivers has cascading consequences for child development. By 3 years of age, children from lower SES backgrounds are estimated to hear 30 million words fewer than their peers from higher SES backgrounds [1]. These differences in input predict differences in vocabulary knowledge, school readiness, and later academic achievement [2,3,4,5]. Few studies, have examined language input in out-of-home childcare settings, especially with respect to consequences for children’s own language use and development.

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