Affiliation:
1. California State University
2. University of Southern California
Abstract
Abstract
This mixed model study first implemented a quantitative approach to investigate the structural coherence of the narratives
that 3- to 6-year old children construct with and without their mothers. We then employed qualitative analysis to identify and categorize
strategies that mothers used to scaffold their children’s developing sequencing skill during narrative conversations. Analysis of 233
co-constructed and 209 independent past-event narratives from 65 mother-child dyads revealed that the children produced narratives with a
range of structural coherence both independently and with maternal assistance. Chronological narratives were the most common structure
produced with and without assistance, but leapfrog narratives persisted in the dyadic context. Five distinct patterns of maternal strategies
that provided chronological structure to their children’s leapfrogs emerged. We discuss the ways in which the maternal strategies identified
promote early literacy skills through scaffolding and modeling school-like literacy practices in everyday conversations.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),History,Education
Cited by
2 articles.
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