“…Applying a fine‐grained analysis to the macrostructures that govern media content (Linebarger et al, 2017) and considering how incidental–intentional learning environments (Hulstijn, 2003) contribute to L2 word learning in media, the narrative instructional context may have been more cognitively demanding of DLL viewers, requiring them to discern new, heavily contextualized words that were tossed between characters in dialogue. New information in narrative genres is similarly challenging for preschoolers to process in both digital media and in‐person environments (Courage, 2019; Furenes, Kucirkova, & Bus, 2021; Neuman, Wong, & Kaefer, 2017; Wong & Neuman, 2019b). Drawing from shared book reading pedagogy that often uses narrative storybooks to promote both L1 and L2 language and literacy development in young children (Flack, Field, & Horst, 2018), researchers acknowledge the importance of providing explicit guidance (e.g., offering pre‐ and post‐reading activities that reinforce the content of the book) and reading comprehension skills (e.g., using context clues to decipher unfamiliar words) to reduce the cognitive demands needed to understand narrative texts (Fitton, McIlraith, & Wood, 2018).…”