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Research Article

Encouraging Spatial Talk: Using Children's Museums to Bolster Spatial Reasoning

Naomi Polinsky

Department of Psychology, Barnard College, Columbia University

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Jasmin Perez

Department of Psychology, Barnard College, Columbia University

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Mora Grehl

Department of Psychology, Barnard College, Columbia University

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Koleen McCrink

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: kmccrink@barnard.edu

Department of Psychology, Barnard College, Columbia University

Address correspondence to Koleen McCrink, Department of Psychology, Barnard College, Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, New York, NY 10027; e‐mail:

kmccrink@barnard.edu

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First published: 27 June 2017
Cited by: 2

ABSTRACT

Longitudinal spatial language intervention studies have shown that greater exposure to spatial language improves children's performance on spatial tasks. Can short naturalistic, spatial language interactions also evoke improved spatial performance? In this study, parents were asked to interact with their child at a block wall exhibit in a children's museum. Some parents were instructed to emphasize formal shape terms, others to emphasize spatial goals, and some were not provided scripts. Children were presented with a series of spatial reasoning tasks before and after this parental interaction, and the amount and type of spatial language during the training session was coded for parents and children. We found that (a) parents significantly increased their spatial language use when prompted, (b) children and parents used different types of spatial language in each of the scripted conditions, and (c) children's spatial language during the interaction, and not parents', predicts children's subsequent improved puzzle performance.

Number of times cited: 2

  • , Effects of geometric toy design on parent–child interactions and spatial language, Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 10.1016/j.ecresq.2018.03.015, (2018).
  • , Children’s attention to task-relevant information accounts for relations between language and spatial cognition, Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 10.1016/j.jecp.2018.02.006, 172, (107-129), (2018).