Children’s language abilities predict success in remote communication contexts

Remote communicative contexts are part of everyday social, familial, and academic interactions for the modern child. We investigated the ability of second-graders to engage in remote discourse, and we determined which of several abilities—language, theory of mind, and temperament—predicted their suc...

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Main Authors: Erin Smolak, Karla K McGregor, Nancy Ohlmann, Nichole Eden, Ronald Pomper, Shivani Gajre, Timothy Arbisi-Kelm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Carnegie Mellon University Library Publishing Service 2021-10-01
Series:Language Development Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lps.library.cmu.edu/LDR/article/id/439/
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author Erin Smolak
Karla K McGregor
Nancy Ohlmann
Nichole Eden
Ronald Pomper
Shivani Gajre
Timothy Arbisi-Kelm
author_facet Erin Smolak
Karla K McGregor
Nancy Ohlmann
Nichole Eden
Ronald Pomper
Shivani Gajre
Timothy Arbisi-Kelm
author_sort Erin Smolak
collection DOAJ
description Remote communicative contexts are part of everyday social, familial, and academic interactions for the modern child. We investigated the ability of second-graders to engage in remote discourse, and we determined which of several abilities—language, theory of mind, and temperament—predicted their success. Fifty 7-to-9-year-old monolingual English speakers with a wide range of language abilities participated in standardized testing and an expository discourse task in which they taught two adults to solve the Tower of London, one in simulated video chat and a second in a simulated phone condition. The discourse was scored for the inclusion of 15 items deemed relevant to the explanation. Children included from 27% to 87% of the items. They communicated more information via gesture than spoken word in both conditions. They included more spoken information in the phone condition than the video condition and more information overall in the phone condition. Performance was positively associated with spoken language ability. There was no relationship between performance and theory of mind, temperament, ability to solve the Tower of London, age, or sex. We conclude that 7-to-9-year-olds adjust the modality and content of their message to suit their remote partner's needs, but their success in remote discourse contexts varies greatly from individual to individual. Children with below-average language skills are at risk for functional impairments in remote communication.
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spelling doaj.art-14e687c9476a4967b61d3e17e1cec42a2024-02-19T12:25:03ZengCarnegie Mellon University Library Publishing ServiceLanguage Development Research2771-79762021-10-011110.34842/8jgf-r802Children’s language abilities predict success in remote communication contextsErin Smolak0Karla K McGregor1Nancy Ohlmann2Nichole Eden3Ronald Pomper4Shivani Gajre5Timothy Arbisi-Kelm6Boys Town National Research HospitalBoys Town National Research HospitalBoys Town National Research HospitalBoys Town National Research HospitalBoys Town National Research HospitalBoys Town National Research HospitalBoys Town National Research HospitalRemote communicative contexts are part of everyday social, familial, and academic interactions for the modern child. We investigated the ability of second-graders to engage in remote discourse, and we determined which of several abilities—language, theory of mind, and temperament—predicted their success. Fifty 7-to-9-year-old monolingual English speakers with a wide range of language abilities participated in standardized testing and an expository discourse task in which they taught two adults to solve the Tower of London, one in simulated video chat and a second in a simulated phone condition. The discourse was scored for the inclusion of 15 items deemed relevant to the explanation. Children included from 27% to 87% of the items. They communicated more information via gesture than spoken word in both conditions. They included more spoken information in the phone condition than the video condition and more information overall in the phone condition. Performance was positively associated with spoken language ability. There was no relationship between performance and theory of mind, temperament, ability to solve the Tower of London, age, or sex. We conclude that 7-to-9-year-olds adjust the modality and content of their message to suit their remote partner's needs, but their success in remote discourse contexts varies greatly from individual to individual. Children with below-average language skills are at risk for functional impairments in remote communication.https://lps.library.cmu.edu/LDR/article/id/439/video chatphonepragmaticsfunctional communicationremote communication
spellingShingle Erin Smolak
Karla K McGregor
Nancy Ohlmann
Nichole Eden
Ronald Pomper
Shivani Gajre
Timothy Arbisi-Kelm
Children’s language abilities predict success in remote communication contexts
Language Development Research
video chat
phone
pragmatics
functional communication
remote communication
title Children’s language abilities predict success in remote communication contexts
title_full Children’s language abilities predict success in remote communication contexts
title_fullStr Children’s language abilities predict success in remote communication contexts
title_full_unstemmed Children’s language abilities predict success in remote communication contexts
title_short Children’s language abilities predict success in remote communication contexts
title_sort children s language abilities predict success in remote communication contexts
topic video chat
phone
pragmatics
functional communication
remote communication
url https://lps.library.cmu.edu/LDR/article/id/439/
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AT ronaldpomper childrenslanguageabilitiespredictsuccessinremotecommunicationcontexts
AT shivanigajre childrenslanguageabilitiespredictsuccessinremotecommunicationcontexts
AT timothyarbisikelm childrenslanguageabilitiespredictsuccessinremotecommunicationcontexts