The purposes of this study are threefold: (a) to examine mothers' deviation
s from the printed text, (b) to examine mothers' reasons for deviating from
the print while sharing books with children, and (c) to examine both the t
ext deviations and reasons mothers held for those deviations across a four-
year span of age groups. Grouped according to their children's ages (6-mont
hs, 12-months, 18-months, 24-months and 4-years) 25 mothers read two presel
ected children's books during two scheduled reading times. Analyses showed
that mothers in this study offered three major reasons for deviating from t
he printed text while reading with their children: (a) simplification: to m
ake difficult text easier, (b) elaboration: to extend their children's know
ledge, and (c) engagement: to maintain their children's attention during th
e book reading event. Mothers of the 24-month and 4-year-olds asked more qu
estions to engage their children, and they spent more time explaining text
concepts. Mothers of the 6-month, 12-month, and 18-month-olds simplified te
xt concepts and spent more time maintaining attention during book sharing.
Mothers' reasons to deviate from the text were highly related to their text
deviations and were based in part upon their perceptions of their children
's cognitive, linguistic, experiential, and affective development.