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Sosa, a professor at Northern Arizona University, compared the amount and type of interaction that occurred in three different situations: during traditional toy play, book reading, and

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The Impact of Toy Type on Interaction

Tamara Stein

Program Specialist, The Hanen Centre

Have you noticed the latest trend in dining out

with children? Lately, when I’ve been out to

eat, I’ve observed many children with tablets at

the dinner table A friend of mine who has a

two-year-old explained this to me, saying, “The

only way I can get Charlie through a meal out is

by letting him watch Thomas the Tank Engine.”

While distracting children with electronic

devices can avoid some negative behaviors, it

can also impact the amount of positive, high

quality, interactions that are essential to

children’s early learning

New research, published in the Journal of the

American Medical Association – Pediatrics,

shows that the type of toy a parent plays with

their child has a significant impact on the

interaction that occurs Anna V Sosa, a

professor at Northern Arizona University,

compared the amount and type of interaction

that occurred in three different situations:

during traditional toy play, book reading, and

playing with electronic toys The results have

implications for our work with parents

Study Design

 26 parent-infant dyads took part in the

study All of the children were 10-16

months of age

 Each dyad was provided with three sets

of toys that were chosen based on their

ability to garner speech about specific

topics: animals, shapes and colours:

1 Traditional toys: a farm animal puzzle, a shape-sorter, and rubber blocks

2 Electronic toys that were marketed

as being “educational”: a baby laptop, a talking farm, and a baby cell phone

3 Board books: two about animals, two about shapes, and one with a colour theme

 The parents were instructed to play with their children twice a day for 15 minutes, for three consecutive days, giving the dyads an opportunity to play with each toy set twice The order of which sets of toys they played with was randomized

 The play sessions were recorded using LENA (Language Environment Analysis) software

 Each play session was transcribed and coded looking at the following five outcome measures:

1 The number of words produced by the adults during the play session

2 The number of content-specific words produced by the parents That is the number of words

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produced by the adults that were

either about animals, shapes, or

colours

3 The number of speech-like child

vocalizations

4 The number of conversational

turns, which was measured as an

utterance by either the parent or

infant that occurred within 5

seconds of an utterance made by

the other conversational partner

5 Number of parent responses per

minute which were coded as the

utterances made by the adults

that were direct responses to

what the child had just vocalized

Poll: When do you think the parents were

most responsive to their children?

a during play with electronic toys

b during traditional toy play

c during shared book reading

d b & c

e a & b

(answer is b and c)

Results

The researchers compared the five outcome

measures in the three types of toy play During

play with electronic toys, there were fewer

adult words, content-specific vocabulary,

conversational turns, and parental responses

compared to either traditional toy play or book

reading There were also fewer speech-like

vocalizations during electronic toy play than

during book reading

When comparing parental behaviors during

traditional toy play and book reading, parents

used fewer words and fewer content-specific

words during toy play than they did when

reading books

The following table displays the average

measures of each outcome over the three

different play types:

Outcome Measure (Mean/Minute)

Activity Electronic

toys

Traditional Toys

Books

Adult words 39.62 55.56 66.89

Content specific words

Child vocalizations

Conversational turns

Clinical Implications

The results of this study give us lots to think about in relation to our work with parents

1 Parents should know about the impact

of each type of toy on their interaction with their child and what this means for their child’s language learning opportunities

Parents need to know that while their children might enjoy engaging with electronic toys, these types of toys can discourage adult-child interactions Sosa hypothesizes that this is because “parents tend to let the toys do the talking for them when their child is interacting with electronic toys” (Sosa, 2015)

There is much hype surrounding electronic toys and media geared at very young children that are marketed as learning tools However, this study adds to a body of evidence that indicates that children’s learning occurs when it is

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mediated by social interactions (e.g Roseberry,

Hirsh-Pasek, and Golinkoff, 2014) When

parents are looking for tools to enhance their

children’s language and learning, it is essential

to remind them that what matters more than

the toy or material, is the actual interaction that

is occurring

2 Explain to parents why book reading

should start early

While this is something that we, as clinicians are

aware of, this study highlights the benefits of

reading with infants – it was in this condition

that parents talked the most, and where the

babies in the study produced the most

language-like vocalizations This clearly

indicates that it is an excellent context for

taking turns and having a conversation When

very young children are exposed to books, they

pay attention to the rhythm of the written

words Book reading encourages language

learning and it prepares children to read on

their own later on (Dickinson, Griffith, Michnick

Golinkoff, Hirsh-Pasek, 2012)

Conclusion

This study adds to our knowledge of how

electronics can negatively affect children’s

ability to learn from everyday interactions and

gives us some concrete information to share

with parents The bottom line is: if a child is

more focused on a toy than on his or her

conversational partner, there will be fewer

opportunities for interaction and language

learning

References

Dickinson, D, Griffith, J.A, Golinkoff, R.M, &

Hirsh-Pasek, K (2012) How Reading Books

Fosters Language Development around the

World Child Development Research, 2012

Goleman, D (2006) Social Intelligence: The New Science of Human Relationships New York: Random House

Roseberry, S, Hirsh-Pasek, K, & Golinkoff, R.M (2014) Skype me! Socially contingent

interactions help toddlers learn language Child Development, 85(3), 956-970

Sosa, A.V (2015) Association of the Type of Toy Used During Play With the Quantity and Quality

of Parent-Infant Communication JAMA Pediatrics, 170(2), 132-138

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