Trying to Close a Knowledge Gap, Word by Word
Amid a political push for government-funded preschool for 4-year-olds, a growing number of experts fear that such programs actually start too late for the children most at risk. That is why Deisy Ixcuna-González, the 16-month-old daughter of Guatemalan immigrants, is wearing a tiny recorder that captures every word she hears and utters inside her familys cramped apartment one day a week.
Recent research shows that brain development is buoyed by continuous interaction with parents and caregivers from birth, and that even before age 2, the children of the wealthy know more words than do those of the poor. So the recorder acts as a tool for instructing Deisys parents on how to turn even a visit to the kitchen into a language lesson. It is part of an ambitious campaign, known as Providence Talks, aimed at the citys poorest residents to reduce the knowledge gap long before school starts. It is among a number of such efforts being undertaken throughout the country.
When she grabs your hand and brings you to the refrigerator and points to the cabinet, that is an opportunity for you to say, Deisy, are you hungry? You want cereal? Lets go look for the cereal,' Stephanie Taveras, a Providence Talks home visitor who also works with Early Head Start, told Deisys mother in Spanish. You do the responding for her now until she has the vocabulary, and she will be hearing you.
Educators say that many parents, especially among the poor and immigrants, do not know that talking, as well as reading, singing and playing with their young children, is important. Ive had young moms say, I didnt know I was supposed to talk to my baby until they could say words and talk to me,' said Susan Landry, director of the Childrens Learning Institute at the University of Texas in Houston, which has developed a home visiting program similar to the one here in Providence.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/26/us/trying-to-close-a-knowledge-gap-word-by-word.html?hp