Mothers' Work Status and 17-month-olds' Productive Vocabulary

Infancy. 2019 Jan-Feb;24(1):101-109. doi: 10.1111/infa.12265. Epub 2018 Sep 28.

Abstract

Literature examining the effects of mothers' work status on infant language development is mixed, with little focus on varying work-schedules and early vocabulary. We use naturalistic data to analyze the productive vocabulary of 44 17-month-olds in relation to mothers' work status (Full-time, Part-time, Stay-at-home) at 6 and 18 months. Infants who experienced a combination of care from mothers and other caretakers had larger productive vocabularies than infants in solely full-time maternal or solely other-caretaker care. Our results draw from naturalistic data to suggest that this care combination may be particularly beneficial for early lexical development.

Keywords: language development; maternal work status; mother-child relations.