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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Get the Story Straight: Contextual Repetition Promotes Word Learning from Storybooks

TLDR
A dramatic increase in children's ability to both recall and retain novel name–object associations encountered during shared storybook reading when they heard the same stories multiple times in succession is found.
Abstract
Although shared storybook reading is a common activity believed to improve the language skills of preschool children, how children learn new vocabulary from such experiences has been largely neglected in the literature. The current study systematically explores the effects of repeatedly reading the same storybooks on both young children's fast and slow mapping abilities. Specially created storybooks were read to 3-year-old children three times during the course of 1 week. Each of the nine storybooks contained two novel name–object pairs. At each session, children either heard three different stories with the same two novel name–object pairs or the same story three times. Importantly, all children heard each novel name the same number of times. Both immediate recall and retention were tested with a four-alternative forced-choice task with pictures of the novel objects. Children who heard the same stories repeatedly were very accurate on both the immediate recall and retention tasks. In contrast, children who heard different stories were only accurate on immediate recall during the last two sessions and failed to learn any of the new words. Overall, then, we found a dramatic increase in children's ability to both recall and retain novel name–object associations encountered during shared storybook reading when they heard the same stories multiple times in succession. Results are discussed in terms of contextual cueing effects observed in other cognitive domains.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Putting Education in “Educational” Apps Lessons From the Science of Learning

TL;DR: A way to define the potential educational impact of current and future apps is offered and how the design and use of educational apps aligns with known processes of children’s learning and development is shown to offer a framework that can be used by parents and designers alike.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of shared storybook reading on word learning: A meta-analysis.

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of 38 studies with 2,455 children investigating how reading styles, story repetitions, tokens and related factors moderate children’s word comprehension, while adjusting for the number of target words identifies story repetition and word types as topics which merit further research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Word learning in the context of referential and salience cues

TL;DR: Results imply that, at 24 months, children use the referential intent of the speaker to learn new words, but when first learning words, children may have a less secure grasp on the meaning of speakers' referentIAL cues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Context and repetition in word learning

TL;DR: The studies reviewed here suggest that the same cognitive mechanisms support word learning in a variety of situations, including fast mapping by mutual exclusivity in shared storybook reading and other situations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Goodnight book: Sleep consolidation improves word learning via storybooks

TL;DR: A key finding is that children who read different stories before napping learned words as well as children who had the advantage of hearing the same story, which shows strong, persistent effects for both repeated readings and sleep consolidation on young children's word learning.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Contextual Cueing: Implicit Learning and Memory of Visual Context Guides Spatial Attention ☆ ☆☆

TL;DR: The results show how implicit learning and memory of visual context can guide spatial attention towards task-relevant aspects of a scene.
Book

How children learn the meanings of words

TL;DR: According to as discussed by the authors, children learn words through sophisticated cognitive abilities that exist for other purposes, such as inferring others' intentions, the ability to acquire concepts, an appreciation of syntactic structure, and certain general learning and memory abilities.

Acquiring a Single New Word

Susan Carey, +1 more
TL;DR: The present study wanted to present the new word in a situation that would approximate a child's everyday word-learning experience at its most casual and undirected level, and intended to provide a strong test of the child's word learning skills.
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