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      Cognitive and environmental predictors of early literacy skills

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          Abstract

          Not all young children benefit from book exposure in preschool age. It is claimed that the ability to hold information in mind ( short- term memory), to ignore distraction ( inhibition), and to focus attention and stay focused ( sustained attention) may have a moderating effect on children’s reactions to the home literacy environment. In a group of 228 junior kindergarten children with a native Dutch background, with a mean age of 54.29 months (SD = 2.12 months), we explored therefore the relationship between book exposure, cognitive control and early literacy skills. Parents filled in a HLE questionnaire (book sharing frequency and an author recognition checklist as indicator of parental leisure reading habits), and children completed several tests in individual sessions with the researcher (a book-cover recognition test, PPVT, letter knowledge test, the subtests categories and patterns of the SON, and cognitive control measures namely digit span of the KABC, a peg tapping task and sustained attention of the ANT). Main findings were: (1) Children’s storybook knowledge mediated the relationship between home literacy environment and literacy skills. (2) Both vocabulary and letter knowledge were predicted by book exposure. (3) Short-term memory predicted vocabulary over and above book exposure. (4) None of the cognitive control mechanisms moderated the beneficial effects of book exposure.

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          Development of an aspect of executive control: development of the abilities to remember what I said and to "do as I say, not as I do".

          Luria's tapping test (tap once when E taps twice, tap twice when E taps once) was administered to 160 children (80 males, 80 females) between 3 1/2 to 7 years old. Older children were faster and more accurate than younger children, with most of the improvement occurring by the age of 6. All children tested demonstrated understanding of the instructions during the pretest, and most started out performing well, but younger subjects could not sustain this. Over the 16 trials, percentage of correct responses decreased, especially among younger subjects. Performance here was compared with performance on the day-night Stroop-like task. The most common error on both tasks was to comply with only one of the two rules. Other errors included tapping many times regardless of what the experimenter did and doing the same thing as the experimenter, rather than the opposite. It is suggested that the tapping task requires both the ability to hold two rules in mind and the ability to inhibit a strong response tendency, that these abilities improve between 3-6 years of age, and that this improvement may reflect important changes within frontal cortex during this period of life.
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            Individual differences in inhibitory control and children's theory of mind.

            This research examined the relation between individual differences in inhibitory control (IC; a central component of executive functioning) and theory-of-mind (ToM) performance in preschool-age children. Across two sessions, 3- and 4-year-old children (N = 107) were given multitask batteries measuring IC and ToM. Inhibitory control was strongly related to ToM, r = .66, p < .001. This relation remained significant controlling for age, gender, verbal ability, motor sequencing, family size, and performance on pretend-action and mental state control tasks. Inhibitory tasks requiring a novel response in the face of a conflicting prepotent response (Conflict scale) and those requiring the delay of a prepotent response (Delay scale) were significantly related to ToM. The Conflict scale, however, significantly predicted ToM performance over and above the Delay scale and control measures, whereas the Delay scale was not significant in a corresponding analysis. These findings suggest that IC may be a crucial enabling factor for ToM development, possibly affecting both the emergence and expression of mental state knowledge. The implications of the findings for a variety of executive accounts of ToM are discussed.
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              Knowledge of storybooks as a predictor of young children's vocabulary.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                bus@fsw.leidenuniv.nl
                Journal
                Read Writ
                Reading and Writing
                Springer Netherlands (Dordrecht )
                0922-4777
                1573-0905
                9 May 2010
                9 May 2010
                April 2011
                : 24
                : 4
                : 395-412
                Affiliations
                Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands
                Article
                9233
                10.1007/s11145-010-9233-3
                3058423
                21475735
                8f96d019-76a4-42fe-879b-935a8ea4680e
                © The Author(s) 2010
                History
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                Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2011

                Neurosciences
                book-cover recognition test,author recognition test,cognitive control,vocabulary,letter knowledge,hle

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