Abstract: | Our study addresses the relationship between teacher talk and children’s conceptual learning in early science instruction. We examined the role of teacher talk in N = 32 kindergarten classes. The teachers were video-recorded at the beginning of a four-week instruction phase while assisting a group of children who were dealing with a learning unit on floating and sinking. The coding of teacher talk included expressions that were pertinent to the content (content-specific vocabulary) and talk that performed an underlying scaffolding function (scaffolding utterances). Teachers’ scaffolding utterances were assigned to four sub-types. The children’s conceptual understanding was measured in individual sessions in a pre-post design. The results of two different analytic approaches indicated that the teachers’ content-specific language acted as a positive predictor of the children’s learning outcomes whereas both positive and negative effects were found with respect to the sub-types of scaffolding utterances. |