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Expressive and receptive language skills of temperamentally shy preschoolers

Abstract

Abstract Although shy children speak less in social situations, the extent to which their language skills fall behind those of their more outgoing peers remains unclear. We selected 22 temperamentally shy and 22 non‐shy children from a larger group of 400 4‐year‐old children who were prescreened for temperamental shyness by maternal report, using the Colorado Childhood Temperament Inventory (CCTI). We then compared the two groups on widely used measures that index expressive and receptive language skills. We found that, although the temperamentally shy children scored lower on both expressive and receptive language skills compared with their non‐shy counterparts, they were nonetheless performing at their age equivalency. The non‐shy children, however, were performing significantly above their age level on expressive and receptive language skills. These findings suggest that the development of normal language skills is not compromised in temperamentally shy preschoolers. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Authors

Spere KA; Schmidt LA; Theall‐Honey LA; Martin‐Chang S

Volume

13

Pagination

pp. 123-133

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

June 1, 2004

DOI

10.1002/icd.345

Conference proceedings

Infant and Child Development

Issue

2

ISSN

1522-7227

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