|
Child Development
Babies can learn words before their first birthday
Last Updated Oct 6, 2008 11:00 AM
Although most parents, educators, and researchers believe that children can't learn specific words until well into their second year, children younger than 1 year can, in fact, learn certain words for things that are not a regular part of their daily lives, according to new research being published in the January/February 2005 issue of the journal, Child Development.
The findings, based on research by Graham Schafer, D.Phil., of the University of Reading in Reading in the United Kingdom, suggest that what is considered a "formal" learning of a word may be underway long before children say much. "It appears that young children may understand word use more flexibly than scientists and parents have previously thought," says Dr. Schafer. The findings call into question earlier beliefs that before their second year most children only learn words for things they are interested in, or when those words are linked to certain routines, such as "bath," "car," or "cat."
To investigate this issue, Dr.
Schafer asked parents of 52 nine-month-olds to use 12 board books and a set of 48 picture cards depicting common objects like keys, apples, fish, and chairs in simple games with their children four times a week for up to 10 minutes a session. The games were designed to build on the kind of routines parents already used in the home: Naming and pointing, sorting, finding the odd one out. No reading was required for either parents or children.
After three months, the children, now 1 year, received a test of word understanding in which they were shown pairs of pictures and asked to look at one of them based on what the investigator said. For instance, the investigator might say, "Fish, fish! Look at the fish!." Dr. Schafer then measured whether the child looked at the correct picture.
Children who had been through the training with their parents looked at the correct picture, while a control group of untrained children did not. "This was notable because in the test, the pictures, voices, and the context were all new to the children," said Dr. Schafer. "So we can conclude that the children who had taken part in the games with their parents had learned these particular words, and not in a way linked to a special context."
The message for parents? "They should be aware that there may be no 'lower limit' to the age at which their children are able to learn new words," says Dr. Schafer. "Parents should definitely talk to their young children – even more than they may already do."
Summarized from Child Development, Vol. 6, Issue 1, Infants Can Learn Decontextualized Words Before Their First Birthday by Schafer G (University of Reading). Copyright 2005 The Society for Research in Child Development, Inc. All rights reserved.
Public release date: 10-Feb-2005
Contact: Andrea Browning
abrowning @ apa.org
202-336-5926
Society for Research in Child Development See also Child Development 318 1 - 8 |
|
Pediatricians Can Help Immigrant Mothers By Explaining Child Development, NICHD Study Suggests
Parents Need Child Development Information to Identify Problems
Groups of immigrant mothers from Japan and South America knew less about child development than did their European American counterparts, according to a study by researchers at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development of the National Institutes of Health.
Such gaps in parenting knowledge, the authors wrote in the November issue of...
In Prince Edward Island there is a growing awareness and appreciation of the strong and lasting impact of early childhood experiences. Government, community, and business sectors have recognized that in order to create a society and an economy that are strong and healthy, we must optimize growth and development for our children.
As a response, and in their role as a partner in Canada's National Children's Agenda,Government... Dear Parents and Educators:
There is a growing consensus within the field of education that a greater emphasis be placed on young
children’s conceptual learning, especially acquisition of language and literacy.
This work demonstrates a timely effort on the part of a broad, cross-section of Arizona’s Early
Childhood Educators to proactively build a consistent curricular framework that demonstrates a move
forward in the focus given to language and literacy skills In early childhood programs. This will be a
great aid in our challenge to enable children to become ... CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTER
The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is co-sponsoring Step ALIVE! 2000, a five-mile walk Sunday, May 7, 2000, at First Christian Church in Alexandria from 1:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. to raise money for the ALIVE! Child Development Center (CDC) located in Alexandria, Va.
The walkathon is an annual event that will celebrate its 19th anniversary and will not only raise funds for the CDC, but also awareness of one of the CDC’s unique programs that provides nationally accredited pres... |
|