The Role of Family on Pathways to Acquiring Early Reading Skills in Lusaka?s Low-Income Communities
This paper reports findings from the study that examined the role of family in children’s acquisition of early reading skills. We recruited 72 first-grade learners and their parents from low-income Zambian families for the study. In response to a home literacy questionnaire, parents reported on thei...
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University of Jyväskylä
2014-01-01
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Online Access: | http://humantechnology.jyu.fi/articles/volume10/2014/Chansa-Kabali_Westerholm.pdf |
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doaj-7fd604ef5f3845aa9dd3fc7ca5d986532020-11-25T01:11:50ZengUniversity of JyväskyläHuman Technology1795-68892014-01-0110152110.17011/ht/urn.201405281857The Role of Family on Pathways to Acquiring Early Reading Skills in Lusaka?s Low-Income CommunitiesTamara Chansa-Kabali0Jari Westerholm1University of ZambiaNiilo Mäki InstituteThis paper reports findings from the study that examined the role of family in children’s acquisition of early reading skills. We recruited 72 first-grade learners and their parents from low-income Zambian families for the study. In response to a home literacy questionnaire, parents reported on their reading attitudes and family literacy environment. Children’s early reading skills were assessed using two early reading tests (orthographic awareness and decoding competence), both conducted at two different points during the year. Regression analyses of pretest and gain scores revealed that parental reading attitude and family literacy environment significantly predicted early reading skills. These findings suggest that the family is an important element in the children’s process of learning to read. Implications of the findings are discussed.http://humantechnology.jyu.fi/articles/volume10/2014/Chansa-Kabali_Westerholm.pdfparental reading attitudeearly reading skillsfamily literacy environmentlow-income familiesZambia |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Tamara Chansa-Kabali Jari Westerholm |
spellingShingle |
Tamara Chansa-Kabali Jari Westerholm The Role of Family on Pathways to Acquiring Early Reading Skills in Lusaka?s Low-Income Communities Human Technology parental reading attitude early reading skills family literacy environment low-income families Zambia |
author_facet |
Tamara Chansa-Kabali Jari Westerholm |
author_sort |
Tamara Chansa-Kabali |
title |
The Role of Family on Pathways to Acquiring Early Reading Skills in Lusaka?s Low-Income Communities |
title_short |
The Role of Family on Pathways to Acquiring Early Reading Skills in Lusaka?s Low-Income Communities |
title_full |
The Role of Family on Pathways to Acquiring Early Reading Skills in Lusaka?s Low-Income Communities |
title_fullStr |
The Role of Family on Pathways to Acquiring Early Reading Skills in Lusaka?s Low-Income Communities |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Role of Family on Pathways to Acquiring Early Reading Skills in Lusaka?s Low-Income Communities |
title_sort |
role of family on pathways to acquiring early reading skills in lusaka?s low-income communities |
publisher |
University of Jyväskylä |
series |
Human Technology |
issn |
1795-6889 |
publishDate |
2014-01-01 |
description |
This paper reports findings from the study that examined the role of family in children’s acquisition of early reading skills. We recruited 72 first-grade learners and their parents from low-income Zambian families for the study. In response to a home literacy questionnaire, parents reported on their reading attitudes and family literacy environment. Children’s early reading skills were assessed using two early reading tests (orthographic awareness and decoding competence), both conducted at two different points during the year. Regression analyses of pretest and gain scores revealed that parental reading attitude and family literacy environment significantly predicted early reading skills. These findings suggest that the family is an important element in the children’s process of learning to read. Implications of the findings are discussed. |
topic |
parental reading attitude early reading skills family literacy environment low-income families Zambia |
url |
http://humantechnology.jyu.fi/articles/volume10/2014/Chansa-Kabali_Westerholm.pdf |
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