Publication | Closed Access
Enhancing vocabulary, print awareness and phonological awareness through shared storybook reading with low-income preschoolers
102
Citations
51
References
2011
Year
Low-income PreschoolersLanguage DevelopmentEducationEarly Childhood EducationChild LiteracyEarly LiteracyChild LanguageLanguage AcquisitionReadingPrimary EducationLanguage StudiesPrint AwarenessSsr ActivitiesControl InterventionPhonological AwarenessChild DevelopmentEarly EducationEarly Childhood LiteracyStorybook Reading
The current study compares the effects of two shared storybook reading (SSR) interventions on language and emergent literacy skills of low-income preschoolers. The control intervention targeted language and print awareness, skills for which there is strong evidence of the effect of SSR. The experimental intervention added a focus on phonological awareness, a skill for which there is less evidence of the effect of SSR. Following the interventions, results indicated that the experimental group ( n = 10) outperformed the control group ( n = 13) on phonological awareness scores, but not on vocabulary and print awareness scores. The study also compared the outcomes of the experimental intervention for the low-income participants with the skills of higher-income preschoolers who did not receive intervention. The low-income children in the experimental condition outperformed their higher-income peers ( n = 12) on all three measures. The experimental intervention offers promising techniques for SSR activities in childcare centres.
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