Description
This book correlates English-speaking children's brain development and acquisition of language with the linguistic input that comes from children's books. Drawing from the most current research on the developing brain, the author demonstrates how language acquisition is exclusively interactive, and highlights the benefit that accrues when that interaction includes the exploratory language play found in early childhood literature. Through discussions of specific domains of grammar, the relation of these domains to children's literature through scaffolding, and the resultant linguistic and cognitive advantages for the child, this volume offers an innovative approach to early brain maturation.
About the Author
Ralf Thiede is an associate professor of English at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte, USA.
Reviews
"The sober title of this book fails to do justice to both the originality of Ralf Thiede's contribution and the extraordinary range of relevant research on which it is based. ... My copy of Thiede's book is full of underscorings and marginal notes... a significant contribution by a polymathic scholar.
Hugh Crago, Children's Literature Association Quarterly, 2020.
"The sober title of this book fails to do justice to both the originality of Ralf Thiede's contribution and the extraordinary range of relevant research on which it is based. ... My copy of Thiede's book is full of underscorings and marginal notes... a significant contribution by a polymathic scholar.
Hugh Crago, Children's Literature Association Quarterly, 2020.
Book Information
ISBN 9780367583323
Author Ralf Thiede
Format Paperback
Page Count 240
Imprint Routledge
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Weight(grams) 453g