Drawing attention to print or meaning: How parents read with their preschool‐aged children on paper and on screens

Author:

Nastasiuk Anika1,Courteau Émilie1,Thomson Jenny2ORCID,Deacon S. Hélène1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology and Neuroscience Dalhousie University Halifax Canada

2. Department of Human Communication Sciences University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

Abstract

BackgroundShared reading is an important opportunity for parents and children to connect and learn, which can support later independent reading skills. Much of the research to date has examined shared reading as parents read physical print books with their children. This research has demonstrated that parents tend to engage in more activities that emphasise the meaning of the stories over the code (i.e., print). Here, we examine the focus of shared reading when parents are reading with their children on paper versus on a digital device and whether this differs across the preschool years.MethodsA total of 253 parents of children aged 0–5 years completed an online self‐report questionnaire. Parents reported on the frequency of engaging in meaning‐ versus code‐related activities during shared book reading on paper and on screen with their youngest child. We conducted a linear regression analysis contrasting code‐ versus meaning‐related activities on paper versus screen modality with age as a continuous variable.ResultsKey to our objectives, parents reported engaging in meaning‐related activities more frequently during shared reading on paper versus on screens and in code‐related activities more frequently during shared reading on screens than on paper. These effects did not differ across age, although overall, parents reported engaging slightly more frequently in shared reading activities in general when their child was older.ConclusionsThe findings show that parents are engaging with their children differently as they read together on paper versus screens. Consistent with prior research, we found that activities emphasising the meaning of stories dominate shared paper book reading experiences in the preschool years. Critically shared reading on screens tips this balance, with parents reporting more code‐related activities. These patterns identify the learning opportunities enabled by the affordances of shared reading on screens.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Reference41 articles.

1. American Academy of Pediatrics. (2023).Screen time guidelines.https://www.aap.org/en/patient‐care/media‐and‐children/center‐of‐excellence‐on‐social‐media‐and‐youth‐mental‐health/social‐media‐and‐youth‐mental‐health‐q‐and‐a‐portal/middle‐childhood/middle‐childhood‐questions/screen‐time‐guidelines/

2. Joint Book Reading Makes for Success in Learning to Read: A Meta-Analysis on Intergenerational Transmission of Literacy

3. Canadian Pediatric Society. (2022).Screen time and young children. Caring for kids.https://caringforkids.cps.ca/handouts/behavior‐and‐development/screen‐time‐and‐young‐children

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