scholarly journals Shared Book Reading Promotes Not Only Language Development, But Also Grapheme Awareness in German Kindergarten Children

2017 ◽  
Vol 08 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia B. C. Wesseling ◽  
Corinna A. Christmann ◽  
Thomas Lachmann
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire Noble ◽  
Giovanni Sala ◽  
Michelle Peter ◽  
Jamie Lingwood ◽  
Caroline F Rowland ◽  
...  

Shared book reading is thought to have a positive impact on young children’s language development, with shared reading interventions often run in an attempt to boost children’s language skills. However, despite the volume of research in this area, a number of issues remain outstanding. The current meta-analysis explored whether shared reading interventions are equally effective (a) across a range of study designs; (b) across a range of different outcome variables; and (c) for children from different SES groups. It also explored the potentially moderating effects of intervention duration, child age, use of dialogic reading techniques, person delivering the intervention and mode of intervention delivery.Our results show that, while there is an effect of shared reading on language development, this effect is smaller than reported in previous meta-analyses (g ̅ = 0.215, p < .001). They also show that this effect is moderated by the type of control group used and is negligible in studies with active control groups (g ̅ = 0.021, p = .783). Finally, they show no significant effects of differences in outcome variable (ps ≥ .400), socio-economic status (p = .654), or any of our other potential moderators (ps ≥ .103), and non-significant effects for studies with follow-ups (g ̅ = 0.145, p = .070). On the basis of these results, we make a number of recommendations for researchers and educators about the design and implementation of future shared reading interventions.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin Quirk

Shared book reading - an adult reading to a child - supports children’s language development (e.g. Sénéchal, Pagan, & Leve, 2008). Most of what we know about shared book reading comes from studies of monolingual families, but shared book reading in bilingual families is different than in monolingual families. First, bilingual families must divide their book-reading time and resources between two languages. Second, bilingual parents may not be equally comfortable reading in both of their languages, which may influence how much and how well they read in each language. One recent study found that in bilingual families, parents own more books and read to their children more often in their stronger language (Gonzalez-Barrero et al., 2021). This could further disadvantage children’s oral language development in their weaker language. Bilingual books - books that tell a story in two languages - could be a useful tool to address this problem as they may provide additional support for reading in a weaker language. Yet little is known about how bilingual families engage with this format. This project addresses this gap by directly observing French-English bilingual parents and their preschool-aged children during shared reading with traditional single-language books and bilingual books. Shared reading interactions will be transcribed, coded and analyzed to assess the quantity and quality of parent-child interactions when reading 1) a bilingual or traditional single-language book and 2) in a stronger or weaker language.


2016 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 106-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharolyn D. Pollard-Durodola ◽  
Jorge E. Gonzalez ◽  
Laura Saenz ◽  
Denise Soares ◽  
Nora Resendez ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 49 ◽  
pp. 59-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richa S. Deshmukh ◽  
Tricia A. Zucker ◽  
Sherine R. Tambyraja ◽  
Jill M. Pentimonti ◽  
Ryan P. Bowles ◽  
...  

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