Does Mother Know Best? Maternal Knowledge Calibration Predicts Children’s Oral Language Development
Author(s) -
Ashley M. Pinkham,
Tanya Kaefer,
Susan B. Neuman
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
child development research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-3987
pISSN - 2090-3995
DOI - 10.1155/2014/387637
Subject(s) - certainty , psychology , comprehension , developmental psychology , domain knowledge , vocabulary , active listening , privilege (computing) , knowledge level , listening comprehension , calibration , language development , general knowledge , social psychology , communication , computer science , mathematics education , linguistics , artificial intelligence , statistics , philosophy , computer security , mathematics , epistemology , programming language
For young children, maternal testimony is an important source of knowledge. Research suggests that children privilege assertions expressed with certainty; however, adults frequently overestimate their knowledge, which may lead them to express certainty about incorrect information. This study addressed three questions. (1) To what extent do mothers convey domain knowledge when talking to their kindergartners? (2) Do mothers successfully calibrate their knowledge during these conversations? (3) Does mothers’ knowledge calibration predict their children’s language outcomes? Forty-nine mother-child dyads read a picture book about a familiar domain. Mothers’ assertions of domain knowledge were coded for accuracy and expressed certainty. Results revealed that mothers tended to overestimate their knowledge. Knowledge calibration accuracy positively predicted child outcomes. Successful calibration was associated with stronger vocabulary knowledge and listening comprehension, whereas poor knowledge calibration was associated with weaker child outcomes. Knowledge calibration may be a crucial factor in the successful transmission of knowledge during mother-child conversations and impact children’s language development
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