Abstract

Parental reading to young children is well-established as being positively associated with child cognitive development, particularly their language development. Research indicates that a particular, “intersubjective,” form of using books with children, “Dialogic Book-sharing” (DBS), is especially beneficial to infants and pre-school aged children, particularly when using picture books. The work on DBS to date has paid little attention to the theoretical and empirical underpinnings of the approach. Here, we address the question of what processes taking place during DBS confer benefits to child development, and why these processes are beneficial. In a novel integration of evidence, ranging from non-human primate communication through iconic gestures and pointing, archaeological data on Pre-hominid and early human art, to experimental and naturalistic studies of infant attention, cognitive processing, and language, we argue that DBS entails core characteristics that make it a privileged intersubjective space for the promotion of child cognitive and language development. This analysis, together with the findings of DBS intervention studies, provides a powerful intellectual basis for the wide-scale promotion of DBS, especially in disadvantaged populations.

Highlights

  • We focus on specific intersubjective, joint attention-relevant behaviors that are prominent in Dialogic Book-sharing” (DBS), and consider their role in the development of child cognitive functioning

  • A natural propensity to share meaning via iconic forms developed in our early evolutionary history, advancing new kinds of cognition and communication, including protolanguage

  • We argue that this natural propensity can be harnessed, even in young infants, by the provision of books with pictorial content, and powerfully exploited to enhance infants’ wider cognitive development via DBS, with specific adult behaviors having been shown to benefit foundational skills for child literacy and educational progress

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Disparities in children’s literacy and educational achievements are of global public concern (Walker et al, 2011; Garcia and Weiss, 2017) Their roots are evident early in development, with substantial differences in language skills associated with family socio-economic status and parent education apparent by just 24 months (Fernald et al, 2013; Justice et al, 2020). “dialogic” reading, or dialogic book-sharing (DBS), appears especially advantageous to children’s language and literacy skills (e.g., Whitehurst et al, 1988; Bus et al, 1995; Hargrave and Sénéchal, 2000) This practice, which is very different from reading a book to a child who passively listens (Peskin and Astington, 2004), varies across families, being less common in those that are more disadvantaged (Bus et al, 1995; Fletcher and Reese, 2005)

CHARACTERISTICS OF DBS
Evolutionary and Developmental Precursors of Iconic Understanding
Ontological Development of the Apprehension of Iconic Forms
Special Linguistic Characteristics of
DISCUSSION
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