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General Guidelines for Caregiver Interactions with Toddlers (page 3)

By B. Otto
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Verbal mapping is also frequently used with toddlers to connect language with ongoing events. By using language to describe an ongoing event, children learn the language needed to refer to the event and to begin to attach labels to the concepts and schemata. For example, in her toddler classroom, Lisa was sitting at a table with two toddlers, Sarah and Robby, who had just been given a lump of play dough and a roller. As Sarah and Robby began to manipulate the play dough, Lisa described their actions: “Look at Robby stretch the play dough. It is getting longer and longer.” “Sarah is rolling her play dough. She is making it smooth.”

In addition to the interaction patterns developed during infancy (i.e., eye contact and shared reference, communication loops, and verbal mapping), mediation is an interaction pattern that enhances children’s language acquisition during the toddler years.

Mediation occurs when the toddler’s caregiver uses language to simplify a complex event, such as in altering the text when sharing a storybook that has a text that is too complex for the toddler to understand. For example, when sharing Corduroy (Freeman, 1968, p. 1) with Westley, a 2 ½-year-old, Lisa altered the text as follows:

Text What Lisa “read”
“Corduroy is a bear who once lived “This is Corduroy [points to bear].
in the toy department of a big store.  He lives in a toy store.
Day after day he waited with all the  See the clown [pauses and points],  the rabbit [pauses and points],
other animals and dolls for somebody."  the doll [pauses and points], the giraffe [pauses and points].”

In changing the text to fit Westley’s developmental level, Lisa simplified the story to increase Westley’s understanding of the story. As caregivers use mediation along with the other interaction patterns of eye contact and shared reference, communication loops, adult-to-child speech, and verbal mapping, a complex linguistic scaffolding develops that supports and encourages toddlers to actively participate in communicating with their caregivers.

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