Deakin University
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Quality of pre-school children's pretend play and subsequent development of semantic organization and narrative re-telling skills

Version 2 2024-06-03, 09:03
Version 1 2015-02-19, 13:33
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 09:03 authored by Karen StagnittiKaren Stagnitti, FM Lewis
Purpose: This study investigated if the quality of pre-school children's pretend play predicted their semantic organization and narrative re-telling ability when they were in early primary school. It was hypothesized that the elaborateness of a child's play and the child's use of symbols in play were predictors of their semantic organization and narrative re-tell scores of the School Age Oral Language Assessment. Method: Forty-eight children were assessed using the Child-Initiated Pretend Play Assessment when they were aged 4-5 years. Three-to-five years after this assessment their semantic organization and narrative re-telling skills were assessed. Results: Results indicate that the elaborateness of a child's play and their ability to use symbols was predictive of semantic organization skills. Use of symbols in play was the strongest play predictor of narrative re-telling skills. The quality of a pre-school child's ability to elaborate complex sequences in pretend play and use symbols predicted up to 20% of a child's semantic organization and narrative re-telling skills up to 5 years later. Conclusions: The study provides evidence that the quality of pretend play in 4-5 year olds is important for semantic organization and narrative re-telling abilities in the school-aged child.

History

Journal

International journal of speech-language pathology

Volume

17

Pagination

148-158

Location

London, Eng.

eISSN

1754-9515

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Speech Pathology Association of Australia

Issue

2

Publisher

Informa Healthcare