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Knowing word meaning helps toddlers memorise faster
Houston, April 2. (PTI): Toddlers learn
new words more easily when they figure out the words' meaning for
themselves, research by a Johns Hopkins undergraduate student suggests.
Meredith Brinster's original research,
suggesting that learning words by inference is more powerful for
3-year-olds than just being told their meaning, is intriguing and may
have important implications for the future of teaching, her faculty
adviser said.
"One of the things that is particularly
exciting about the work Meredith is doing is its potential to change
the way we think about education and learning," said Justin Halberda,
assistant professor of psychological and brain sciences at Johns
Hopkins.
Brinster's work was funded by a Johns
Hopkins Provost's Undergraduate Research Award. One of about 45 PURA
winners this academic year, Brinster, a senior will present the results
of her research at an awards ceremony held at Johns Hopkins on March 8.
A graduate of Shawnee Regional High
School in Medford, she will also present at a meeting of the Society
for Research in Child Development, to be held in Boston March 29 to
April one.
Interested in how very young children
learn to attach the names of objects to the objects themselves,
Brinster, 22, of Medford, N.J., designed a study to measure which
word-learning strategy was more effective: direct instruction, in which
an adult "directly" points to and names an unfamilia r object, or
inference, in which toddlers use reason (such as process of
elimination) to mentally "fasten" an unfamiliar word to an unfamiliar
object.
Based on previous research, Brinster posited that the young children would learn words more quickly via inference.
According to her preliminary results, she was correct.
"We found that our hypothesis was true, and that inference is better than instruction," said Brinster, a psychology major.
Over the summer, Brinster worked with
100 children, ages 36 to 42 months, who came to the Laboratory for
Child Development on the Johns Hopkins Homewood campus. One trial
tested how well children learned words through inference, and the other
how well they learned through direct instruction.
During the inference trial, Brinster
showed the youngsters both familiar and strange objects (for instance,
a ball and a plumber's 'T' connector).
After saying a nonsense word (blicket
for instance), she would ask them to either point to or grab hold of
the "matching" item. Since a ball is a "ball," the children might
conclude that the unfamiliar object -- the "T" -- was the "blicket".
In the direct instruction trial, the child was simply shown an unfamiliar item and heard the nonsense word.
A short while later, Brinster would
invite the children to play with typical, familiar toys in the lab's
waiting area. During the relaxed play period, she would bring out a
"blicket" or a "dax" that the children had seen during the trial, and
ask the youngsters a question.
"For instance, I might say, I think one
of these is called 'blicket', but I can't remember which one it is. Can
you help me? Do you know which one is the blicket?," Brinster said.
"This way, I could ascertain how well
they learned the word. Once we analysed all of our data, it was clear
that inference worked best."
Halberda, Brinster's mentor, called his student's results "important".
"While we know that active engagement
is the key to rapid learning," he said adding, "Meredith's result
suggesting that knowledge gained via a child's own inferences is
sometimes more powerful and longer lasting than knowledge gained
through instruction may have powerful repercussions for how we teach
new material. These implications have yet to be explored, but this
first result is tantalising."
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