What is it about?
Parent-child interactions, which are filled with verbal and nonverbal behaviors, provide a window into how children develop new ideas. Here, we explore the communicative strategies in two U.S. communities - the Menominee, living on tribal lands in rural Wisconsin, and non-Native, primarily white families living in an urban area - as parents and children played with a nature diorama.
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Photo by Tim Swaan on Unsplash
Why is it important?
This study was designed and implemented in partnership with members of the Menominee community, with whom we have a longstanding collaboration. Non-native and Native-American parents and children engage in rich, multi-modal communication when talking and playing. We find that Native-American children match or surpass their non-native peers in amount of talk, and amount of gesture, demonstrating the value of dyadic interaction for transmitting cultural knowledge.
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Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Hands on: Nonverbal communication in Native and non-Native American parent–child dyads during informal learning., Developmental Psychology, January 2022, American Psychological Association (APA),
DOI: 10.1037/dev0001279.
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