Wearable Tech Helps Early Learners Improve Language Contact
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 02/28/18
Whether  they're filling in the "30-million-word gap" or increasing the number of  "conversational turns" they have with adults, a  group of kids at a Virginia childcare center were exposed to an average of  1,100 more words and 59 conversational turns by the time they'd participated in  a four-month pilot study. The pilot used a "talking  pedometer" that records the conversation a child has.
The study,  done in two classrooms at Rappahannock County's Child  Care & Learning Center,  was aided by Teaching Strategies, which offers professional  development to help teachers increase interactive talk. Along with specific  curriculum provided by Teaching Strategies, participants applied natural  language technology, called Language Environment Analysis  (LENA), to capture  and analyze the speech, including the number of words heard by the child and  the number of back-and-forths in that conversation — when the child waits for and  responds to the caregiver.
 
 
The kids in  one classroom wore small LENA devices in a pocket of a vest one day a week. The  audio recorded was analyzed and put into reports reviewed by the educators  working with a Teaching Strategies coach. The coaching was intended to help  staff learn techniques for increasing their linguistic interactions with the  children.
"The  reports really showed teachers that throughout a whole day, there are multiple  times when children are getting changed or sitting down for a meal or a snack,  and a lot of those times engagement can be lost if you aren't being cognizant  of how you are using that time or interacting with that child," noted  Jennifer Tubb, the Teaching Strategies research associate who coached the  educators during the pilot, in a blog article about her work.
"If  it wasn't for LENA, I wouldn't have picked up that one of my students didn't  communicate as much as the others," said one educator who participated in  the pilot, in a press release. "I am thrilled to know how I can make a  difference with what I've learned through this program."
"The  program was an eye-opener for us," added Lisa Pendleton, director of the  center, in the study. "The research results show  that children learn not just through our lesson plans, but also through our  conversations about what we are doing while we do it."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.