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Parental goals and talk with toddlers

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2010

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Wiley-Blackwell
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Rowe, Meredith L., and Allison Casillas. 2010. “Parental Goals and Talk with Toddlers.” Infant and Child Development 20 (5) (October 6): 475–494.

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Myriad studies support a relation between parental beliefs and behaviours. This study adds to the literature by focusing on the specific relationship between parental goals and their communication with toddlers. Do parents with different goals talk about different topics with their children? Parents’ goals for their 30-month olds were gathered using semi-structured interviews with 47 primary caregivers, whereas the topics of conversations that took place during interactions were investigated via coding videotapes of observations in the home. Parents’ short- and long-term goals spanned several areas, including educational, social–emotional, developmental and pragmatic goals. Parental utterances most frequently focused on pragmatic issues, followed by play and academic topics. Parents who mentioned long-term educational goals devoted more of their talk to academic topics and less to pragmatic topics, controlling for socioeconomic status. Thus, parental goals differ and these differences relate to the conversations parents engage in with their children.

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