Child Care and Early Education Research Connections

Skip to main content

Building vocabulary knowledge in preschoolers through shared book reading and gameplay

Description:
This study moves beyond previous investigations to examine whether an educational intervention combining shared book reading with a vocabulary game increases children's vocabulary knowledge. Four-year-olds (N = 44) were randomly assigned to dyads in either an intervention (shared book reading plus vocabulary review game) or comparison condition (shared book reading, after-reading vocabulary review, and game that did not teach vocabulary). After two 30-min sessions, results demonstrated that the intervention condition outperformed the comparison condition on measures of receptive and expressive knowledge of taught vocabulary words. Children in the intervention group who scored the lowest at pretest on the receptive measure saw the most gains in taught word knowledge. Findings suggest that combining vocabulary gameplay with shared book reading improved children's learning of the vocabulary words in comparison to a comparison group. (author abstract)
Resource Type:
Reports & Papers
Country:
United States

- You May Also Like

These resources share similarities with the current selection.

Child Motivation, Shared Book Reading, and Vocabulary Development: A Growth Mixture Modeling Approach

Other

Vocabulary acquisition without adult explanations in repeated shared book reading: An eye movement study

Reports & Papers

Shared Book Reading and Early Vocabulary Development: Child Motivation as a Moderator [Executive Summary]

Other
Release: 'v1.58.0' | Built: 2024-04-08 08:44:34 EDT