“…One particular intervention, dialogic reading , incorporates many specific adult behaviors into target child communication attempts to support language development in the context of JBR (Whitehurst, Falco, Lonigan, & Fischel, 1988). Higher level FLTs such as expansions (i.e., extending a child’s utterance) and open-ended questions (i.e., asking why and how questions) seem to elicit more words from children who are at the early word phrase level of language development (Mol, Bus, DeJong, & Smeets, 2008; Whitehurst et al, 1988), while lower level FLTs such as linguistic mapping (i.e., putting child’s unintelligible utterance into words) and imitation (i.e., repeating the child’s utterance verbatim) may enhance language skills in younger populations of children at the prelinguistic stage of development (Girolametto et al, 2002; Yoder, McCathren, Warren, & Watson, 2001). Evidence-based research in dialogic reading techniques has shown dramatic improvements in oral language development for children who are at risk for language delays (Bus, 2001; Institute of Education Sciences, 2010).…”