Wellbeing effects from family literacy education: An ecological study
<p>This paper describes a study that used community psychology theories to investigate family-focused literacy education programmes, evaluations of which usually focus solely on skills gains and their economic advantage. Specifically, the study drew on an ecological systems-based, culturally a...
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doaj-70bfacb3c20b4bf5b806ca29534451562020-11-25T03:19:36ZengUniversità del SalentoCommunity Psychology in Global Perspective2421-21132017-10-0132223710.1285/i24212113v3i2p2215895Wellbeing effects from family literacy education: An ecological studyJane Furness0Neville Robertson1Judy Hunter2Darrin Hodgetts3Linda Waimarie Nikora4University of WaikatoUniversity of WaikatoUniversity of WaikatoMassey UniversityUniversity of Waikato<p>This paper describes a study that used community psychology theories to investigate family-focused literacy education programmes, evaluations of which usually focus solely on skills gains and their economic advantage. Specifically, the study drew on an ecological systems-based, culturally adaptive framework for personal, relational and collective wellbeing bringing much-needed new thinking to how family-focused adult literacy education might be theorised and practiced. The study traced the experiences of 19 adult participants in four family-focused literacy programmes in different communities in New Zealand over 18 months. Participant accounts from 79 key informant interviews, 12 classroom observations and programme documentation were scrutinized using latent theoretical thematic analysis which drew on broad perspectives of literacy, ecological systems theory, network theory and integrative theories of wellbeing. The study found that the programmes shared common principles and practices that prioritised holistic wellbeing whilst valuing literacy enhancement. It showed that participants experienced positive literacy, social and wellbeing-related outcomes. Programme effects were found to be interconnected and to flow on to other parts of participants’ lives and to their families and communities. We demonstrate community psychology’s critical contribution to a fuller understanding of family-focused literacy education.</p>http://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/cpgp/article/view/16811Ecological theory, community psychology, wellbeing, literacy, Māori, Pacific peoples |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jane Furness Neville Robertson Judy Hunter Darrin Hodgetts Linda Waimarie Nikora |
spellingShingle |
Jane Furness Neville Robertson Judy Hunter Darrin Hodgetts Linda Waimarie Nikora Wellbeing effects from family literacy education: An ecological study Community Psychology in Global Perspective Ecological theory, community psychology, wellbeing, literacy, Māori, Pacific peoples |
author_facet |
Jane Furness Neville Robertson Judy Hunter Darrin Hodgetts Linda Waimarie Nikora |
author_sort |
Jane Furness |
title |
Wellbeing effects from family literacy education: An ecological study |
title_short |
Wellbeing effects from family literacy education: An ecological study |
title_full |
Wellbeing effects from family literacy education: An ecological study |
title_fullStr |
Wellbeing effects from family literacy education: An ecological study |
title_full_unstemmed |
Wellbeing effects from family literacy education: An ecological study |
title_sort |
wellbeing effects from family literacy education: an ecological study |
publisher |
Università del Salento |
series |
Community Psychology in Global Perspective |
issn |
2421-2113 |
publishDate |
2017-10-01 |
description |
<p>This paper describes a study that used community psychology theories to investigate family-focused literacy education programmes, evaluations of which usually focus solely on skills gains and their economic advantage. Specifically, the study drew on an ecological systems-based, culturally adaptive framework for personal, relational and collective wellbeing bringing much-needed new thinking to how family-focused adult literacy education might be theorised and practiced. The study traced the experiences of 19 adult participants in four family-focused literacy programmes in different communities in New Zealand over 18 months. Participant accounts from 79 key informant interviews, 12 classroom observations and programme documentation were scrutinized using latent theoretical thematic analysis which drew on broad perspectives of literacy, ecological systems theory, network theory and integrative theories of wellbeing. The study found that the programmes shared common principles and practices that prioritised holistic wellbeing whilst valuing literacy enhancement. It showed that participants experienced positive literacy, social and wellbeing-related outcomes. Programme effects were found to be interconnected and to flow on to other parts of participants’ lives and to their families and communities. We demonstrate community psychology’s critical contribution to a fuller understanding of family-focused literacy education.</p> |
topic |
Ecological theory, community psychology, wellbeing, literacy, Māori, Pacific peoples |
url |
http://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/cpgp/article/view/16811 |
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AT janefurness wellbeingeffectsfromfamilyliteracyeducationanecologicalstudy AT nevillerobertson wellbeingeffectsfromfamilyliteracyeducationanecologicalstudy AT judyhunter wellbeingeffectsfromfamilyliteracyeducationanecologicalstudy AT darrinhodgetts wellbeingeffectsfromfamilyliteracyeducationanecologicalstudy AT lindawaimarienikora wellbeingeffectsfromfamilyliteracyeducationanecologicalstudy |
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