Enhancing early language and literacy skills for racial/ethnic minority children with low incomes through a randomized clinical trial: The mediating role of cognitively stimulating parent-child interactions

Child Dev. 2024 Jul-Aug;95(4):1172-1185. doi: 10.1111/cdev.14064. Epub 2023 Dec 28.

Abstract

Parenting is a critical mediator of children's school readiness. In line with this theory of change, data from the randomized clinical trial of Smart Beginnings (tiered Video Interaction Project and Family Check-Up; N = 403, treatment arm n = 201) were used to examine treatment impacts on early language and literacy skills at child age 4 years (nLatinx = 168, nBlack = 198, nMale = 203), as well as indirect impacts through parental support of cognitive stimulation at child age 2 years. Although results did not reveal direct effects on children's early skills, there were significant indirect effects for early literacy (β = .03, p = .05) and early language (β = .04, p = .04) via improvements in parental cognitive stimulation. Implications for interventions targeting parenting to improve children's school readiness beginning at birth are discussed.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial

MeSH terms

  • Child, Preschool
  • Early Intervention, Educational / methods
  • Ethnic and Racial Minorities
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Language Development
  • Literacy*
  • Male
  • Parent-Child Relations* / ethnology
  • Parenting / ethnology