Spanish-Language Narration and Literacy: Culture, Cognition, and Emotion

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Edition: 1st
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2008-09-08
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
List Price: $66.00

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Summary

This book is divided into three main topical sections: (1) Parent-child construction of narrative, which focuses on aspects of the social interaction that facilitate oral narrative development in Spanish-speaking children; (2) Developing independent narration by Spanish-speaking children; and (3) Narrative links between Latino children's oral narration and their emergent literacy and other school achievements. Chapters address narration to and by Latino children aged six months to eleven years old and in low, middle, and upper socioeconomic groups. Nationalities of speakers include the following: Costa Rican, Dominican, Ecuadorian, Mexican, Peruvian, Puerto Rican, Venezuelan, and Spanish-English bilingual children who are citizens or residents of the United States. Narratives studied include those in conversations, personal and fictional stories, and those prompted by wordless picture books or videos. Thus, the current project includes diverse nationalities, socioeconomic backgrounds, and genres of narrative.

Table of Contents

Introduction Alison Bailey
Parent-Child Interaction
Cultural variations in mother-child narrative discourse style
Early socio-communicative narrative patterns during Costa Rican mother-infant interaction
Lessons in mother-child and father-child personal narratives in Latino families
Evaluation in Spanish-speaking mother-child narratives: the social and sense-making function of internal state references
Love, diminutives, and gender socialization in Andean mother-child narrative conversations
Developing Independent Narration
The intersection of language and culture among Mexican-heritage children three to seven years old
Beyond chronicity: evaluation and temporality in Spanish-speaking children's personal narratives
Narrative stance in Venezuelan children's stories
Mestizaje: Afro-Caribbean and indigenous Costa Rican children's narratives and links with other traditions
Links to Literacy and Other School Achievements
Latino mothers and their preschool children talk about the past
The contribution of Spanish-language narration to the assessment of early academic performance of Latino students
Cultural variation in narrative competence and its implications for children's academic success
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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