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Wiley InterScience

Child Development

Child Development

Volume 72 Issue 5, Pages 1347 - 1366

Published Online: 28 Jan 2003

Journal Compilation © 2010 The Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.



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Cognition and Language
The Relations of Early Television Viewing to School Readiness and Vocabulary of Children from Low-Income Families: The Early Window Project
John C. Wright, Aletha C. Huston, Kimberlee C. Murphy, Michelle St. Peters, Marites Piñon, Ronda Scantlin & Jennifer Kotler
  1 Department of Human Ecology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX,   2 University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS,   3 University of Denver, Denver, CO,   4 Psychology Corporation, San Antonio, TX,   5 University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA,   6 Georgetown University, Washington, DC
Copyright 2001 Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.

ABSTRACT

For two cohorts of children from low- to moderate-income families, time-use diaries of television viewing were collected over 3 years (from ages 2 – 5 and 4 – 7 years, respectively), and tests of reading, math, receptive vocabulary, and school readiness were administered annually. Relations between viewing and performance were tested in path analyses with controls for home environment quality and primary language (English or Spanish). Viewing child-audience informative programs between ages 2 and 3 predicted high subsequent performance on all four measures of academic skills. For both cohorts, frequent viewers of general-audience programs performed more poorly on subsequent tests than did infrequent viewers of such programs. Children's skills also predicted later viewing, supporting a bidirectional model. Children with good skills at age 5 selected more child-audience informative programs and fewer cartoons in their early elementary years. Children with lower skills at age 3 shifted to viewing more general-audience programs by ages 4 and 5. The results affirm the conclusion that the relations of television viewed to early academic skills depend primarily on the content of the programs viewed.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/1467-8624.t01-1-00352 About DOI

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