“…Emergent literacy interventions for young at-risk children are generally framed within the theoretical perspective that emergent literacy knowledge is best acquired through frequent, informal, naturalistic, and meaningful interactions with literacy-related artifacts (e.g., books, writing instruments; Watkins & Bunce, 1996;Watson, Layton, Pierce, & Abraham, 1994). Mediated interaction with such artifacts under the guidance of more capable and knowledgeable individuals (e.g., parents, teachers, siblings, friends) is a primary vehicle through which children acquire increasingly sophisticated levels of emergent literacy knowledge (Justice & Ezell, 1999).…”