Parent-involvement in children's reading development: Parent and teacher perceptions, and child reading outcomes
McDowall, Philippa Jill
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McDowall, P. J. (2014). Parent-involvement in children’s reading development: Parent and teacher perceptions, and child reading outcomes (Thesis, Doctor of Philosophy). University of Otago. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10523/4926
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http://hdl.handle.net/10523/4926
Abstract:
The purpose of this PhD research was to investigate dimensions of parent-involvement in children's reading during the first two years at school. Given that the development of reading skills is the key instructional task during this period, the research focused specifically on involvement practices that support children’s acquisition of literacy. A multi-informant and multidimensional research design was used to describe parent and school practices and perceptions of parent-involvement in children's reading in two research projects. The practices used by school principals and teachers to invite parent-involvement may determine whether such collaboration is effective. The first research project involved evaluating, then refining, measures developed to describe the ways used by schools to encourage parent-involvement in children's reading development. Two representative samples of New Zealand primary school principals and teachers of students in their first year of school were then surveyed. These educators were asked to record the strategies used at their schools to encourage parent-involvement in children's reading, and to rate the helpfulness of each practice. Participants’ perceptions of the helpfulness of parent-involvement practices were strongly associated with their reports of the actual practices used. Educators' responses were then used to develop constructs to describe different ways that schools communicate with parents, encourage parent-involvement in children's reading at school and at home, and communicate with parents. The next part of this project investigated whether educators’ perceptions about parent-involvement in children's reading development were associated with school characteristics, including school community resources, school population, ethnic composition of students, community size, and educational region of New Zealand. The main findings were that educators in schools serving more affluent communities believed more strongly in the ability of the parent community to contribute to students’ learning, and principals’ from smaller schools were more positive about the helpfulness of communicating with all families from the school community. This study concluded that educators’ perceptions about parent-involvement in children's reading development are many and varied, and in the first 2 years of primary school may have only modest associations with school characteristics.
The second research project was a longitudinal investigation of the associations between parent-reported involvement in children’s schooling, family and parent demographics, teachers' reports of their practices to encourage in children's reading, and children’s literacy development during their first 2 years at school. Four schools were included in the sample, and school principals, teachers, parents, and children from the school community were invited to participate. The reported practices and perspectives of teachers in this sample varied within schools, but were similar overall to those of their peers in a National survey. Indicators of parent-involvement in their children's reading in the first two year of schooling were then evaluated. Six robust dimensions of parent-involvement practices supporting early reading were identified: school- based involvement; home-school communication; parent-child reading, parent-teaching, library card use, and child-parent reading. Changes in parent-involvement in children's reading from the first to the second school year differed by dimension and between families. Predictors of parent-involvement in children's reading in children’s first year of school, and of changes in parent-involvement from the first to the second year of school were then examined. Contender factors included family characteristics, parents' perceptions about involvement and of invitations from others, and child factors (sex, child decoding skills, school exposure). Different combinations of these factors predicted each dimension of parent-involvement in children's reading, whereas changes in parent-involvement between the first and second year of school were associated with changes in school factors and parent perceptions. A longitudinal research design was also used to examine indicators of child reading across the first two years of school as children progressed from learning to read to reading to learn. This research showed that children who had been at school for a longer period, and children from homes with greater resources, had higher reading outcomes in both the first and second year at school. Parent-involvement practices also had predictive associations with child reading and growth trajectories. Patterns of association between aspects of parent-involvement in children's reading and child outcomes were different, depending on whether the child was reading at or below the expected reading level, and there was some indication that parent-involvement in children's reading was of greater value for children reading below expected reading levels.
This research project makes a unique contribution to the New Zealand literature by specifically examining associations between parent-involvement in children's reading and child literacy development, and adds to the international literature on parent-involvement through its examination of multiple indicators of parent-involvement in children's reading, measures of child factors, and their relations with child growth trajectories.
Date:
2014
Advisor:
Schaughency, Elizabeth
Degree Name:
Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Discipline:
Psychology
Publisher:
University of Otago
Keywords:
parent-involvement; literacy; child development; education; New Zealand
Research Type:
Thesis
Languages:
English
Collections
- Thesis - Doctoral [3045]
- Psychology collection [378]