Daily Mail

How to boost your child’s word power: Chat to them!

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

poorer children with speech problems will learn to talk better if their parents have more conversati­ons with them, a study suggests.

previous research has shown that underprivi­leged children hear around 30million fewer words than their better- off classmates by the time they start school.

But the latest study suggests that by spending more time in conversati­on with their parents, children from poorer economic background­s can narrow the ‘word gap’ with their wealthier peers.

Almost a third of five-year-olds in the UK start school without the basic speaking skills needed to participat­e in class.

The US research highlights the importance of parents spending time with children and engaging them in conversati­on rather than leaving them to watch TV. It showed stronger connection­s between Wernicke’s area and Broca’s area – brain regions critical for the comprehens­ion and production of speech – in children whose parents spent longer talking to them. The key factor was that parents and children took turns in conversing.

The study, published in the Journal of Neuroscien­ce, was carried out on 40 four- to six-year-old children and their parents.

During a weekend, researcher­s from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology recorded how much parents spoke to their children and then carried out brain scans.

Last month education Secretary Damian Hinds said it was a ‘persistent scandal’ that so many children start school without the ability to speak in sentences.

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