Fiction or non-fiction: Parent-reported book preferences of their preschoolers with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

Published December 2019

Abstract

Children’s early interactions with books are important for fostering development of oral language and emergent literacy skills. It is not known whether children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder show different preferences for text types in the home environment prior to school entry. The current study aimed to: (i) investigate parent-reports of the favourite books of their children with autism spectrum disorder compared to typically developing children and (ii) identify whether there are differences in the reasons why books were preferred across the two groups. Participants included children (aged 26–70 months) with autism spectrum disorder (n = 41) and typically developing peers (n = 164). Parent-reports of their child’s current favourite book/s were coded as fiction versus non-fiction and also category type. Parents also reported why the book was considered a favourite and this was coded. There were no differences between groups for fiction versus non-fiction, with both groups preferring fiction (>95% of responses). A strong category preference for animal topics across both groups was present. Significant group differences were found when asked to select specific reasons for favourite book preferences. This study provides preliminary evidence of similarities between preschool children with autism spectrum disorder and typically developing peers’ preferences for fiction books during the early years.
Citation
Armstrong, R. M., Paynter, J., & Westerveld, M. F. (2019). Fiction or non-fiction: Parent-reported book preferences of their preschoolers with autism spectrum disorder. Autism & Developmental Language Impairments. https://doi.org/10.1177/2396941519896736 .

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Project
Story Time
Program
School Years