This study examines vocabulary growth and stability over time in 385 young children (two to four years of age) who attended a preschool. The relation between child, family, and institutional factors (i.c gender, age, socioeconomic status (SES), family background (native/non-native), teacher education, teacher experience, and preschool quality) and vocabulary development was studied. Structural Equation Modeling revealed that initial vocabulatylevel was mainly predicted by child and family factors, such as age, SES and family background, and that later vocabulary and vocabulary growth were additionally predicted by preschool factors. Interactions between preschool factors and family background indicated that with a highly educated teacher no...
This observational study examined the relationships among home literacy environments, classroom lang...
Little research has explored how preschools can support children’s second-language (L2) vocabulary d...
Preschool is a critical time in children’s oral language and pre-literacy skill development, but thi...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study examines vocabulary growth and stability over time in 385 y...
The primary source for young children's vocabulary development is parent-child interaction. How pare...
This thesis project explores the correlation between students' lexicon development and the amount of...
Children vary widely in the rate at which they acquire words—some start slow and speed up, others st...
The associations between vocabulary growth and reading development were examined longitudinally for ...
Background: Strong associations between infant vocabulary and school-age language and literacy skill...
Previous research on the effects of word-level factors on lexical acquisition has shown that frequen...
We examined the vocabulary growth of lexical categories in 719 children (age 13–24 months) as part o...
The aim of this longitudinal study is to evaluate three views on the relationship between nonword re...
Considerable research has investigated the effect of preschool education on subsequent school succes...
Item does not contain fulltextYoung children’s language and early literacy development is highly pre...
The impact that preschool education has on children’s cognitive abilities as they prepare to enter k...
This observational study examined the relationships among home literacy environments, classroom lang...
Little research has explored how preschools can support children’s second-language (L2) vocabulary d...
Preschool is a critical time in children’s oral language and pre-literacy skill development, but thi...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study examines vocabulary growth and stability over time in 385 y...
The primary source for young children's vocabulary development is parent-child interaction. How pare...
This thesis project explores the correlation between students' lexicon development and the amount of...
Children vary widely in the rate at which they acquire words—some start slow and speed up, others st...
The associations between vocabulary growth and reading development were examined longitudinally for ...
Background: Strong associations between infant vocabulary and school-age language and literacy skill...
Previous research on the effects of word-level factors on lexical acquisition has shown that frequen...
We examined the vocabulary growth of lexical categories in 719 children (age 13–24 months) as part o...
The aim of this longitudinal study is to evaluate three views on the relationship between nonword re...
Considerable research has investigated the effect of preschool education on subsequent school succes...
Item does not contain fulltextYoung children’s language and early literacy development is highly pre...
The impact that preschool education has on children’s cognitive abilities as they prepare to enter k...
This observational study examined the relationships among home literacy environments, classroom lang...
Little research has explored how preschools can support children’s second-language (L2) vocabulary d...
Preschool is a critical time in children’s oral language and pre-literacy skill development, but thi...