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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Although developmental researchers endorse a multifaceted view of early
communication, where language, non-verbal behaviour and socio-affective
exchange contribute concurrently to the social construction of shared meanings, past
studies of social development usually focused on component parts of interpersonal
communication. This research integrates three aspects of communicative exchange
in order to clarify stylistic differences among 30-month-old children. To achieve
this objective, data from three different coding procedures (speech acts, information
content and affective states) were coded for 52 children and then merged on the
basis of onset time. Fifteen distinct descriptors were identified in the analyses of
tri-modal communicative processes. Three different communicative styles were
identified in person-centred cluster analyses of these descriptors. Analysis of
variance revealed that 13 of the constructs significantly differentiated the groups.
The first group was characterised as highly engaged in play but with low affect
expression; these children’s mode of communication centred more on mother’s
feelings and personal references. Children in the second cluster asked more
questions and made more statements about objects. Finally, children in cluster three
engaged in more complex evaluative discourse while orienting maternal behaviour
to ongoing activity. Results are discussed in terms of the importance of a qualitative,
holistic approach to the study of diversity in children’s communicative performance
and in contemporary research on early learning.
Description
Keywords
Mother–child communication Typological approach Language Affective expression Information exchange
Citation
Early Child Development and Care, ifirs article, 1-19