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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Do Parents' Literacy Beliefs and Home Literacy Experiences Relate to Children's Literacy Skills?

Norman, Rebecca C. 12 December 2007 (has links) (PDF)
This study examined the relationship among parents' literacy beliefs, home literacy experiences, and children's literacy skills. Forty-three children, who attended a university preschool, and their parents participated in the study. Parents' literacy beliefs and the home literacy experience, namely shared book reading, were examined through a self-report questionnaire. One important section of this questionnaire provided information about parents' beliefs concerning literacy acquisition; specifically, whether they believed in a top-down or bottom-up approach. The children were tested individually for emergent literacy skills, including concepts of print, alphabetic knowledge, rhyming skills, oral language skills, word recognition, and invented spelling. The results were analyzed using multiple linear regressions and hierarchical linear regressions to determine whether there is evidence of a relationship among literacy beliefs, home literacy experiences, and children's emergent literacy skills. The present study found support for a connection between parental beliefs, measured through their behaviors, and child outcomes. Children whose parents had a top-down literacy perspective (meaning-based orientation), measured by knowledge of children's book titles, had higher receptive vocabulary skills than children whose parents had a bottom-up (skill-based) literacy belief. The implications for parents, early childhood educators, and teachers are that literacy educational programs may need to focus both on teaching parents new literacy behavior as well as on developing beliefs about literacy acquisition.
22

Hemmiljöns påverkan på F-3-elevers läsförmåga / The impact of the home environment on student's reading skills from kindergarten to grade 3

Hall, Emma, Rolfson, Rasmus January 2023 (has links)
Detta är en kunskapsöversikt över vad i hemmiljön som påverkar läsförmågan hos elever i årskurs F-3. Efter att ha sökt systematiskt i databaserna ERIC, Google Scholar, EBSCO och LIBSEARCH har vi valt tio artiklar med såväl nationell som internationell forskning. Samtliga artiklar är peer reviewed. I vårt urval har vi använt oss av Openai chatGPT för att systematiskt sortera artiklarnas innehåll. Vi identifierade tre teman som var genomgående i samtliga artiklar. Vår slutsats är att de faktorer som påverkar elevers läsförmåga är hemmiljöns kontext i form av socioekonomisk status och dess kulturella kapital, vilket påverkar de literacyaktiviter som erbjuds i hemmet samt det värde aktiviteterna ges. Det är den informella läsförmågan som tydligast påverkas av förutsättningarna i hemmet. Skolan tycks ha svårare att kompensera för de informella delarna av elevernas läsförmåga. I de mer formella aspekterna av läsförmåga som till exempel avkodning verkar skolan dock kunna kompensera för elevernas olika förutsättningar.
23

Home Literacy Environment of Spanish-speaking Latino Families

Yeomans-Maldonado, Gloria January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
24

Biliteracy development: A multiple case study of Korean bilingual adolescents

Joo, Hyungmi 18 August 2005 (has links)
No description available.
25

An investigation into reading literacy support provided by homes of grade six learners in certain Limpopo Primary Schools

Khoza, Brain Emanuel January 2015 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. (English)) -- University of Limpopo, 2015 / This study seeks to determine the support of reading–literacy provided by homes of grade six learners in some Limpopo primary schools, which assists them in learning to read, and particularly to read with understanding. This study adopted a qualitative approach. The case study design was used. Twelve learners and twelve parents of the chosen learners served as participants to this study. Three data collection instruments were used. As the researcher wanted to first determine good and poor readers a comprehension test was designed by the researcher in order to select the learners. After learners had written the test an interview guide was given to the learners to establish different kinds of reading related activities which learners engage in with their parents. Lastly a check list was issued to learners and parents to assess parental involvement in learners’ reading literacy development. Findings of the current study are that some learners do not receive the parental support they need in order to develop reading literacy. As a result, many learners fail in school because they are illiterate. It is suggested that in order for learners to improve in their reading literacy parental support must be encouraged in South African schools. School programmes must be designed in a way that it inculcates parental support. And most importantly parents need to be made aware of the crucial role they play in their children’s reading literacy development. Key words: Reading literacy, multiple literacy, parental support and home literacy.
26

An Investigation Of The Relationship Between Preschoolers

Altun, Dilek 01 February 2013 (has links) (PDF)
The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between preschool children&rsquo / s reading attitudes and their home literacy environment. In addition, children&rsquo / s perceptions of reading in terms of their reading attitudes were examined as a part of this study. The sample of this study consisted of 261 parents and their 5 year-old children who were enrolled preschool in Ankara, Turkey. The data of this study were collected through child interviews, demographic information forms, and the following questionnaires: the Home Literacy Environment Questionnaire (Umek et al., 2005) and the Preschool Children Reading Attitudes (Saracho, 1986) questionnaire. These questionnaires were both translated into Turkish, and statistical analyses were conducted to control for validity and reliability issues through a pilot study. The results of the study showed that there was a statistically significant relationship between preschool children&rsquo / s reading attitudes and their home literacy environment. In addition, the study revealed there were some differences in children&rsquo / s reading attitudes and their home literacy environment in regards to demographic variables. Furthermore, the study demonstrated that children who have more positive reading attitudes tended to give clearer and more detailed responses to questions and were more aware that writing contains messages. In addition, those children mentioned letters and the role of letters in the learning to read process.
27

Parents’ Perceptions of Partners in Print, a Family Literacy Program

Godbey, Rebecca Jane 01 July 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Partners in Print, a family literacy program, was brought to the urban elementary school in this study to educate and empower kindergarten and first grade parents to promote literacy development at home. This research aimed to explore the impact of participation in this program after consistent participation by utilizing a one-group pre-test, post-test research design. The Parent Empowerment and Home Literacy Environment Survey, which included both structured and unstructured questions, was administered before and after participation in the program to elicit notions of parent empowerment and growth in the home literacy environment. Parent participants also completed a document review of program handouts to triangulate the data. The data suggested that parents feel more empowered after consistently participating in Partners in Print. There was also evidence that the home literacy environment was of higher quality after participation. This study validated the practice of implementing family literacy programs as a strategy for empowering parents and enriching the home literacy environments of children.
28

Home Reading Environment and Brain Activation in Preschool Children Listening to Stories

Hutton, John S. 22 June 2015 (has links)
No description available.
29

Sibling Impact On Early Literacy Development As Observed By Parents

Murdoch, Margaret Kate 09 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
30

Learning The ABC's: Family Involvement in Kindergarten Literacy

England, Rebecca Lynn 01 January 2005 (has links)
The present study investigated home literacy environments established through reading with children, engaging in literacy activities, and having literacy materials provided, along with families' participation in literacy-related school events. One hundred one kindergarten children and their families from five classrooms in two inner-city urban elementary schools were invited to participate in the "Learning the ABCs" project. A total of 68 families gave consent. Participation in the project included receiving 15 weeks of Home Literacy Bags. The 68 participating children were randomly assigned into two intervention groups using cluster sampling of the five classes. Group One received weekly bags with four activities while Group Two received weekly bags with four activities, a variety of materials, and one book. The primary purpose of this study was to determine the strength of four family involvement variables (reading with children, engaging in literacy activities, having literacy materials provided, and participating in literacy-related events at school) in predicting kindergarten students' gain scores on three literacy assessments (ALRI, TERA-3, and DIBELS). The primary research question was: To what extent can kindergarten students' ALRI, TERA-3, and DIBELS gain scores be explained by participation in family involvement activities? A secondary purpose of the study was to determine which of the family involvement activities was the strongest predictor of kindergarten students' literacy achievement as measured by the literacy assessments. The secondary research question was: Which family involvement activity is the strongest predictor of gains in kindergarten students' letter and sound knowledge and phonological awareness? Literacy assessments were implemented using a pre/post test design. The literacy gain scores served as the dependent variables and the family involvement activities served as the independent variables. Each variable set was included in a regression analysis, which was followed up with an analysis of regression structure coefficients (rs) to determine the individual variable contributions.

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