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Dive into the research topics where Virginia Tompkins is active.

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Featured researches published by Virginia Tompkins.


Early Education and Development | 2014

Classroom Age Composition and Vocabulary Development Among At-Risk Preschoolers

Ying Guo; Virginia Tompkins; Laura M. Justice; Yaacov Petscher

Research Findings: The purpose of this exploratory study was to examine the relationship between classroom age composition and preschoolers’ vocabulary gains over an academic year and also to examine whether these relations were moderated by classroom quality. In this study (N = 130 children in 16 classrooms representing a subset of all children enrolled in these classrooms), results showed a significant cross-level interaction between classroom age composition and childrens age, suggesting positive effects of greater variance in classroom age composition for younger but not older children. The interaction between behavior management (1 dimension of classroom quality) and classroom age composition was also significant, indicating that a wider distribution of classroom age composition was positively related to childrens vocabulary gains within classrooms characterized by better behavior management. Practice or Policy: Findings underscore the importance of childrens social interactions with more knowledgeable conversational partners in promoting their vocabulary development and signify the need to help teachers learn how to manage childrens behaviors so as to provide a classroom that is optimal for child learning.


Journal of Learning Disabilities | 2015

Empirically Based Profiles of the Early Literacy Skills of Children With Language Impairment in Early Childhood Special Education.

Laura M. Justice; Jessica A. R. Logan; Joan N. Kaderavek; Mary Beth Schmitt; Virginia Tompkins; Christopher W. Bartlett

The purpose of this study was to empirically determine whether specific profiles characterize preschool-aged children with language impairment (LI) with respect to their early literacy skills (print awareness, name-writing ability, phonological awareness, alphabet knowledge); the primary interest was to determine if one or more profiles suggested vulnerability for future reading problems. Participants were 218 children enrolled in early childhood special education classrooms, 95% of whom received speech-language services. Children were administered an assessment of early literacy skills in the fall of the academic year. Based on results of latent profile analysis, four distinct literacy profiles were identified, with the single largest profile (55% of children) representing children with generally poor literacy skills across all areas examined. Children in the two low-risk categories had higher oral language skills than those in the high-risk and moderate-risk profiles. Across three of the four early literacy measures, children with language as their primary disability had higher scores than those with LI concomitant with other disabilities. These findings indicate that there are specific profiles of early literacy skills among children with LI, with about one half of children exhibiting a profile indicating potential susceptibility for future reading problems.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2011

Classroom Quality and Student Engagement: Contributions to Third-Grade Reading Skills

Ying Guo; Carol McDonald Connor; Virginia Tompkins; Frederick J. Morrison

This study, using NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development longitudinal data, investigated the effects of classroom quality and students’ third-grade behavioral engagement on students’ third-grade reading achievement (n = 1,364) and also examined the extent to which students’ third-grade behavioral engagement mediated the association between classroom quality and childrens reading skills. SEM results revealed that controlling for family socio economic risk and students’ first-grade reading achievement, classroom quality significantly, and positively predicted childrens behavioral engagement, which in turn predicted greater reading achievement. Higher levels of childrens behavioral engagement were associated with higher reading achievement. Implications for policy and practice are discussed.


Reading and Writing | 2013

Inference Generation, Story Comprehension, and Language Skills in the Preschool Years.

Virginia Tompkins; Ying Guo; Laura M. Justice


Teaching and Teacher Education | 2011

Exploring Factors Related to Preschool Teachers' Self-Efficacy.

Ying Guo; Laura M. Justice; Brook Sawyer; Virginia Tompkins


Early Childhood Research Quarterly | 2013

Inferential talk during teacher–child interactions in small-group play

Virginia Tompkins; Tricia A. Zucker; Laura M. Justice; Sevda Binici


Cognitive Development | 2015

Improving Low-Income Preschoolers' Theory of Mind: A Training Study.

Virginia Tompkins


Cognitive Development | 2015

Mothers’ cognitive state talk during shared book reading and children’s later false belief understanding

Virginia Tompkins


Infant and Child Development | 2014

Personalization in Mother–Child Emotion Talk Across Three Contexts

Natalia Kucirkova; Virginia Tompkins


Social Development | 2018

The relation between parents' mental state talk and children's social understanding: A meta-analysis

Virginia Tompkins; Joann P. Benigno; Bridget Kiger Lee; Bridget M. Wright

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Ying Guo

University of Cincinnati

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Christopher W. Bartlett

The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Daniel F. Blosser

The Ohio State University at Lima

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