Coordinated attention and parent labelling during free play predicts children’s language skills in the first two years

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Abstract

This study examines how coordinated gaze and parent’s labelling during naturalistic play scaffold language development. Sixty-two, 15- to 18-month-olds (n = 28 female) and their mothers (n = 43 White) played for 15 minutes. Coordinated gaze was micro-coded and parents’ speech was transcribed. Children’s language skills were measured directly during the lab visit and via parent-report at 24 months. Results showed that frequency of parents’ ‘play monitoring’ – jointly looking to an object with their child and briefly looking to their object-focused child – positively predicted children’s language skills at 15- to 18- and 24 months. Referential labelling during children’s sustained attention to objects also predicted receptive language. These findings emphasise the importance of well-coordinated, child-sensitive parental behaviours in supporting toddlers’ emerging communication skills.

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