Vocabulary knowledge mediates the link between socioeconomic status and word learning in grade school

•We studied if and why SES predicts word learning in 8–15 year olds.•Vocabulary mediated the relationship between SES and word learning.•Vocabulary was predictive even when accounting for reading and working memory.•The results shed light on why the SES vocabulary gap increases in the school years....

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental child psychology 2018-02, Vol.166, p.679-695
Hauptverfasser: Maguire, Mandy J., Schneider, Julie M., Middleton, Anna E., Ralph, Yvonne, Lopez, Michael, Ackerman, Robert A., Abel, Alyson D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We studied if and why SES predicts word learning in 8–15 year olds.•Vocabulary mediated the relationship between SES and word learning.•Vocabulary was predictive even when accounting for reading and working memory.•The results shed light on why the SES vocabulary gap increases in the school years. The relationship between children’s slow vocabulary growth and the family’s low socioeconomic status (SES) has been well documented. However, previous studies have often focused on infants or preschoolers and primarily used static measures of vocabulary at multiple time points. To date, there is no research investigating whether SES predicts a child’s word learning abilities in grade school and, if so, what mediates this relationship. In this study, 68 children aged 8–15 years performed a written word learning from context task that required using the surrounding text to identify the meaning of an unknown word. Results revealed that vocabulary knowledge significantly mediated the relationship between SES (as measured by maternal education) and word learning. This was true despite the fact that the words in the linguistic context surrounding the target word are typically acquired well before 8 years of age. When controlling for vocabulary, word learning from written context was not predicted by differences in reading comprehension, decoding, or working memory. These findings reveal that differences in vocabulary growth between grade school children from low and higher SES homes are likely related to differences in the process of word learning more than knowledge of surrounding words or reading skills. Specifically, children from lower SES homes are not as effective at using known vocabulary to build a robust semantic representation of incoming text to identify the meaning of an unknown word.
ISSN:0022-0965
1096-0457
DOI:10.1016/j.jecp.2017.10.003