articleChild DevelopmentJul 1, 2006GREEN OA

Mother–Child Bookreading in Low-Income Families: Correlates and Outcomes During the First Three Years of Life

University of Nebraska–Lincoln · Iowa State University · +3 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

About half of 2,581 low-income mothers reported reading daily to their children. At 14 months, the odds of reading daily increased by the child being firstborn or female. At 24 and 36 months, these odds increased by maternal verbal ability or education and by the child being firstborn or of Early Head Start status. White mothers read more than did Hispanic or African American mothers. For English-speaking children, concurrent reading was associated with vocabulary and comprehension at 14 months, and with vocabulary and cognitive development at 24 months. A pattern of daily reading over the 3 data points for English-speaking children and daily reading at any 1 data point for Spanish-speaking children predicted…

Citation impact

710
total citations
FWCI
21.71
Percentile
100%
References
70
Citations per year

Authors

9

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Firstborn
  • Psychology
  • Developmental psychology
  • Odds
  • Reading (process)
  • Vocabulary
  • Vocabulary development
  • Reading comprehension
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
No related works found for this paper.