Learning about letters is an important component of emergent literacy. We explored the possibility that parent speech provides information about letters, and also that children’s speech reflects their own letter knowledge. By studying conversations transcribed in CHILDES (MacWhinney, 2000) between parents and children aged one to five, we found that alphabetic order influenced use of individual letters and letter sequences. The frequency of letters in children’s books influenced parent utterances throughout the age range studied, but children’s utterances only after age two. Conversations emphasized some literacy-relevant features of letters, such as their shapes and association with words, but not letters’ sounds. Describing these patterns and how they change over the preschool years offers important insight into the home literacy environment.
Learning about letters, and how they differ from pictures, is one
important aspect of a young child’s print awareness. To test the
hypothesis that parent speech provides children with information about these
differences, we studied parent–child conversations in CHILDES (MacWhinney, 2000). We found that parents
talk to their young children about letters, differentiating them from pictures,
by 1–2 years of age and that some of these conversational patterns
change across the preschool years in ways that emphasize important features of
letters, such as their shape. We also found that children talk about
letters and pictures in distinct ways, suggesting an implicit understanding of
some of the differences between letters and pictures at an early age. Some
differences in parent–child conversations about letters were found as a
function of socioeconomic status: Lower SES families appeared to focus more on
alphabetic order than higher SES families. The general letter knowledge
expressed in these conversations suggests that everyday interactions are an
important component of the home literacy environment and that they differ, in
some respects, as a function of child age and family background.
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