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Private speech in preschool children: developmental stability and change, across-task consistency, and relations with classroom behaviour

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2003

ADAM WINSLER
Affiliation:
George Mason University
JESUS RENÉ DE LEÓN
Affiliation:
University of Alabama
BEVERLY A. WALLACE
Affiliation:
University of Alabama
MARTHA P. CARLTON
Affiliation:
Southern Illinois University – Edwardsville
ANGELA WILLSON-QUAYLE
Affiliation:
George Mason University

Abstract

This study examined (a) developmental stability and change in children's private speech during the preschool years, (b) across-task consistency in children's self-speech, and (c) across-setting relations between children's private speech in the laboratory and their behaviour at home and in the preschool classroom. A group of 32 normally developing three- and four-year-old children was observed twice (six month inter-observation interval) while engaging in the same individual problem-solving tasks. Measures of private speech were collected from transcribed videotapes. Naturalistic observations of children's behaviour in the preschool classroom were conducted, and teachers and parents reported on children's behaviour at home and school. Individual differences in preschool children's private speech use were generally stable across tasks and time and related to children's observed and reported behaviour at school and home. Children whose private speech was more partially internalized had fewer externalizing behaviour problems and better social skills as reported by parents and teachers. Children whose private speech was largely task-irrelevant engaged in less goal-directed behaviour in the classroom, expressed more negative affect in the classroom, and rated as having poorer social skills and more behaviour problems. Developmental change occurred during the preschool years in children's use and internalization of private speech during problem-solving in the form of a reduction over time in the total number of social speech utterances, a decrease in the average number of words per utterance, and an increase in the proportion of private speech that was partially internalized.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2003 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

This research was supported by faculty research grants from the College of Education, University of Alabama. We would like to thank the children, families and staff at the Child Development Center, Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Also we appreciate the research assistance given by Kermit Carter, Christie Howell, Tammy Jenkins, Joy Johnson, Grace Long and Dana Pase. This research was presented in part at the Society for Research in Child Development conference in Albuquerque, NM (1999).