Abstract

Child-directed speech (CDS), which can help children learn new words, has been rigorously studied among infants and parents in home settings. Yet, far less is known about the CDS that teachers use in classrooms with toddlers and children’s responses, an important question because many toddlers, particularly in high-need communities, attend group-care settings. This exploratory study examines the linguistic environment during teacher-led book readings in American Early Head Start classrooms serving 2-year-olds from households in poverty. Seven teachers in four classrooms were trained to emphasize target words while reading story and informational books. We first analyzed the nature and quality of their book readings from a macro-level, exploring global instructional quality [Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS)] and linguistic complexity [i.e., diversity of vocabulary (D) and sophistication of syntax (MLU-w)], and we also examined micro-level teacher-child talk strategies and use of target words. Compared to prior research, these classrooms had similar global quality and syntactic complexity, although less lexical diversity. Exploratory results also revealed three distinct teacher talk patterns—teachers who emphasized (1) comments, (2) questions, and (3) a balance of the two. Question-focused teachers had more adult and child talk during reading, as well as more repetitions of target words, and stronger CLASS Engaged Support for Learning. However, comment-focused teachers used more diverse vocabulary and had stronger CLASS Emotional and Behavioral Support. Results illuminate the nature and quality of CDS in toddler classrooms, particularly in the context of an intervention emphasizing target vocabulary words, and highlight applications for professional development and questions for further research.

Highlights

  • Author Disclaimer: The opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not represent views of the Institute or the U.S Department of Educ

  • All three aspects of CDS in this sample were relatively distinct across the sample as a whole, there were some indications that aspects of Emotional and Behavioral Support were enhanced by more vocabulary-rich teacher talk and less child talk

  • We found that global classroom quality (CLASS-T) was moderate and generally equivalent to larger Early Head Start samples (Vogel et al, 2015: Emotional and Behavioral Support = 5.3, Engaged Support for Learning = 3.5) and to Head Start preschools (U.S Department of Health and Human Services [DHHS], 2021: Emotional Support = 6.03, Classroom Organization = 5.78, Instructional Support = 2.94)

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Summary

Methods

ProcedureIn fall 2019, we partnered with a local Early Head Start provider in a major urban city in the American northeast to develop Head Start on Vocabulary (HSoV). Several effective interventions have improved the quality of preschool teachers’ talk to children, resulting in gains in preschoolers’ knowledge of taught words as well in standardized vocabulary scores (Landry et al, 2011; Weiland and Yoshikawa, 2013), including our own model which we have developed and tested over 20 years (Wasik and Bond, 2001; Wasik et al, 2006; Wasik and Hindman, 2011, 2020) In this project, we adapted our preschool program to address center-based toddler teachers’ classroom CDS, developing HSoV for Early Head Start

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