Title of article
Mother–child reminiscing about everyday experiences: Implications for psychological interventions in the preschool years
Author/Authors
Penny Wareham، نويسنده , , Karen Salmon، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
20
From page
535
To page
554
Abstract
The preschool years are a critical period for all aspects of child development, and any disruption to cognitive or socio-emotional functioning at this stage has potential repercussions for current and future functioning. There is, therefore, a need for clinical interventions that optimize the functioning of children at risk of psychological disorders. In the current paper, we review research showing that the way in which parents discuss everyday experiences with their young children has significant implications for the childrenʹs cognitive and socio-emotional functioning. Specifically, mothers who engage their child in a rich elaborative style of talking about past experiences have children who also develop an elaborative style of remembering and reporting personal experiences. Evidence suggests that elaborative reminiscing can benefit childrenʹs social and self understanding, the quality of the parent–child relationship, and language and emergent literacy. Moreover, findings show that elements of the elaborative style can be identified and taught to parents. We propose that elaborative parent–child discussion about the past could form the basis of developmentally sensitive intervention during the preschool period.
Journal title
Clinical Psychology Review
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Clinical Psychology Review
Record number
483894
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