Preschoolers’ communicative functions during shared book reading with fathers and mothers

Barachetti, C., & Lavelli, M. (2010). Preschoolers’ communicative functions during shared book reading with fathers and mothers. Early Education and Development, 21,595-613. doi: 10.1080/10409280903150336

Abstract.Research Findings: This study examined whether the communicative behaviors of preschoolers during shared-reading interactions differ according to child age or parent gender. Twenty Italian preschoolers (from 3.1 to 5.11 years) were observed during book reading with each parent separately. Communicative behaviors were analyzed according to the speech act theory. The findings showed that older children produced significantly more requests with fathers than with mothers but significantly more assertions with mothers than with fathers. Sequential analysis showed that only the fathers’ reading utterances were significantly followed by older children’s requests. These results suggest that older children adjusted their communicative functions to elicit richer conversations from their fathers. Practice or Policy: These findings have implications for the assessment and support of preschoolers’ conversational skills.

https://vpn.univr.it/doi/abs/10.1080/,DanaInfo=www.tandfonline.com,SSL+10409280903150336

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