Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
917974 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2015 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We examined associations between parenting and school readiness in preschoolers.•Responsiveness significantly predicted cognitive and emotion skills one year later.•Inferential language input was associated with concurrent language and emotion skills.•There was an interaction between inferential language input and language skills.•Children with strong initial skills benefited from inferential language input.

This study examined the concurrent and longitudinal associations of parental responsiveness and inferential language input with cognitive skills and emotion knowledge among socioeconomically disadvantaged preschoolers. Parents and 2- to 4-year-old children (mean age = 3.21 years, N = 284) participated in a parent–child free play session, and children completed cognitive (language, early literacy, early mathematics) and emotion knowledge assessments. Approximately 1 year later, children completed the same assessment battery. Parental responsiveness was coded from the videotaped parent–child free play sessions, and parental inferential language input was coded from transcripts of a subset of 127 of these sessions. All analyses controlled for child age, gender, and parental education, and longitudinal analyses controlled for initial skill level. Parental responsiveness significantly predicted all concurrent cognitive skills as well as literacy, math, and emotion knowledge 1 year later. Parental inferential language input was significantly positively associated with children’s concurrent emotion knowledge. In longitudinal analyses, an interaction was found such that for children with stronger initial language skills, higher levels of parental inferential language input facilitated greater vocabulary development, whereas for children with weaker initial language skills, there was no association between parental inferential language input and change in children’s vocabulary skills. These findings further our understanding of the roles of parental responsiveness and inferential language input in promoting children’s school readiness skills.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
Authors
, , , , , , , , , , , ,