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Studying the Socioeconomic Gap in Childhood Language Comprehension

Research from the University of Maryland Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences tests a new theory about how a child’s socioeconomic status (SES) can impact his or her ability to learn and comprehend language early on in life.

Prior studies have found systematic relationships between how much caregivers talk to children and what they learn. On average, children from higher-SES families hear more language than their lower-SES peers and it is commonly assumed that this provides a significant barrier to language learning. However, the results of a new UMD-led study forthcoming in the journal Cognition suggest that SES differences are much more targeted.

“Our research tests the hypothesis that all children—regardless of socioeconomic status—learn grammatical structure with minimal input, but hearing more language allows children to retrieve their knowledge from memory more efficiently during comprehension,” said Yi Ting Huang, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, who led the study. “This means the effect of socioeconomic status on development reflects not a failure to learn language but challenges with recalling what has already been learned during communication.”

Researchers tested roughly 130 English-speaking three- to seven-year-olds from various SES families on their comprehension of an infrequent grammatical structure (e.g., passives like “The seal is eaten by it”). Relative to the higher-SES peers, children from lower-SES families had more difficulty understanding sentences that introduce high comprehension demands. Yet, when these demands were removed (e.g., “It was eaten by the seal”), no SES differences were found.  These findings suggest that all children learned infrequent structures, but language experience may enable some to access this information more readily during later comprehension.

This work also sheds light on why vocabulary size differs across SES backgrounds. Current interventions like the 30 Million Words Initiative are based on the assumption that children’s failure to learn words reflects a lack of experience with those words at home. Yet Huang and her colleagues found that even when that input exists from caregivers, learning can be challenging if children can’t accurately retrieve grammatical knowledge in order to comprehend sentences.  

“In total, our results suggest that isolating why outcomes vary across populations requires identifying not just what children hear but how they use it,” said Huang. “Gaining a better understanding of the effects of socioeconomic status on early language development is crucial for reducing achievement gaps in school readiness. I hope our research can help in the development of new strategies and interventions to help all children with language development, regardless of their socioeconomic status.”

Huang’s co-authors on the study include Kathryn Leech from the Department of Human Development and Quantitative Methodology at the University of Maryland and Meredith Rowe from the Harvard University Graduate School of Education. The full article can be downloaded here for a limited time.
 

 

Published on Mon, Dec 5, 2016 - 3:17PM

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