4.5 Article

Causal Effects of Parent Number Talk on Preschoolers' Number Knowledge

Journal

CHILD DEVELOPMENT
Volume 91, Issue 6, Pages E1162-E1177

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cdev.13423

Keywords

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Funding

  1. McCormick Foundation
  2. CME Group Foundation grant, Improving Children's Early Math Skills: From the Classroom to the Lab and Back
  3. National Science Foundation Spatial Intelligence and Learning Center Grants [SBE1041707, SBE-0541957]
  4. NICHD [P01HD40604]
  5. NSF CAREER [DRL-1452000]
  6. NCER [R305B090025]
  7. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-1144082]

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Individual differences in children's number knowledge arise early and are associated with variation in parents' number talk. However, there exists little experimental evidence of a causal link between parent number talk and children's number knowledge. Parent number talk was manipulated by creating picture books which parents were asked to read with their children every day for 4 weeks.N = 100 two- to four-year olds and their parents were randomly assigned to read either Small Number (1-3), Large Number (4-6), or Control (non-numerical) books. Small Number books were particularly effective in promoting number knowledge relative to the Control books. However, children who began the study further along in their number development also benefited from reading the Large Number Books with their parents.

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