Published On: November 6th, 2017|

NPR – Maureen Pao

“A pivotal study from the early 1990s identified what’s become known as “the 30 million word gap” — that is, by age 3, children from families on welfare are exposed to 30 million fewer words than their more affluent peers — and the words they experience are more discouraging and negative compared to their peers’ vocabulary.”(more)