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Let’s talk: Teachers pushed to converse more with youngest kids

Talk to children in daycare: Young baby stands in light wood crib holding onto rail with several cribs in the background
Research shows more interaction between children and caregivers improves brain development. mariakray/Shutterstock

This story was originally published by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education.

States are using talk pedometers, conversation coaches to develop young brains

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — When Rickeyda Carter started teaching young children, she led story time the way she remembers being taught as a child. That meant children were expected to sit, listen — and remain silent. “When the teacher is reading, you don’t talk,” Carter recalled.

Carter didn’t think anything of this approach for nearly a decade, until the program where she was employed, New Rising Star Early Childhood Development Center, opted to participate in an initiative aimed at improving the interactions between teachers and children in their care. For 10 weeks, the 3- and 4-year-olds in Carter’s classroom donned miniature vests with “talk pedometers” nestled inside, meant to track how often children and their teachers converse.

Carter received weekly coaching and data on how much, when and with whom she was talking in her classroom. As she learned about the science behind why those conversations are so important, Carter realized she wanted to change things.

Talk to children at daycare: Two blonde toddlers sit on floor playing with toys while brunette woman sits next to them

Oksana Kuzmina/Shutterstock

“For a child, responsive relationships are everything, and they begin with interactions,” LENA.org. Schools can participate in a program using LENA technology — the industry standard for measuring talk with children — to boost interactions between teachers and children. Combined with cloud-based software, the “talk pedometer” delivers detailed feedback that helps adults make proven, sustainable increases in interactive talk with children.

Carter started talking more with the children, especially during meal times and after they woke up from naps, times when the pedometers showed she wasn’t interacting with them as much. She prioritized connecting more with children getting the least attention. She revamped story time to make it more interactive.

“I’m learning that it’s OK for them to interrupt in the middle of a story and ask questions,” she said. Those changes made a difference. Children quickly became more engaged in activities and seemed to learn more, Carter said, especially when it came to literacy and reading comprehension.

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