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Reading to Children

Kids in HarlemImage by jsgraphicdesign via Flickr

In a post entitled From Harlem to India: You Have to Read to Your Children which talks about the story of Geoffrey Canada reaching the conclusion after years of frustrating social work that “the most effective time to intervene in the lives of poor kids is between the ages of 0-3, when the only people who can really give that help are the parents.”It goes on to quote from a NY Times article:

Researchers began peering deep into American homes, studying up close the interactions between parents and children. The first scholars to emerge with a specific culprit in hand were Betty Hart and Todd R. Risley, child psychologists at the University of Kansas, who in 1995 published the results of an intensive research project on language acquisition. Ten years earlier, they recruited 42 families with newborn children in Kansas City, and for the following three years they visited each family once a month, recording absolutely everything that occurred between the child and the parent or parents. The researchers then transcribed each encounter and analyzed each child’s language development and each parent’s communication style. They found, first, that vocabulary growth differed sharply by class and that the gap between the classes opened early. By age 3, children whose parents were professionals had vocabularies of about 1,100 words, and children whose parents were on welfare had vocabularies of about 525 words. The children’s I.Q.’s correlated closely to their vocabularies. The average I.Q. among the professional children was 117, and the welfare children had an average I.Q. of 79.

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