Students' perceptions' of reading : an investigation into the perceptions of reading by underachieving year five and six students in a low decile New Zealand primary school.
Numerous educational researchers have stressed the importance of children learning to read. Achieving well in the New Zealand educational system depends on a range of factors that are closely linked to the ability to read effectively. Research has found that children who experience difficulties in l...
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Language: | en |
Published: |
University of Canterbury. School of Literacies and Arts in Education
2010
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10092/3753 |
Summary: | Numerous educational researchers have stressed the importance of children
learning to read. Achieving well in the New Zealand educational system
depends on a range of factors that are closely linked to the ability to read
effectively. Research has found that children who experience difficulties in
learning to read in the first years of schooling often face failure throughout
their school years and in adulthood. This in turn can restrict job opportunities
and make it more difficult to participate or benefit economically in society.
The aim of this study was to explore the perceptions of reading by
underachieving Year five and six students in a low decile New Zealand
Primary School. The study sought to understand what supports or barriers these
students' encountered in their acquisition of reading skills and how their views
may inform current school and home practices for more effective literacy
learning. The data gathered was shared with one of the participant's parents.
Little has yet been reported on this topic from the point of view of the learner.
This study was designed to hear their views and to see what they saw as
important in learning to read. The researcher used semi-structured focus group
interviews to determine the children's perceptions about how they learned to
read.
Learning to read is complex and a child's understanding of how they learn to
read is also multifaceted. The study concluded that children viewed their
parents or whanau as very influential in their achievement in learning to read.
The views expressed by the children and the parents reinforced the importance
of the home environment's relationship with the school. Parents play an
integral in the fostering of children's literacy development. It is important that
parents are aware of the critical role they play in their child's education because
as the study found children learn to read more effectively with the support of
their whanau.
Teachers also playa vital role in recognising the importance of reading and
preparing all students no matter what their proficiency for literacy learning. It is
the day to day work of educators that ensures the majority of children will learn
to read. The participants in this study did not appear to understand that they
were working below their expected levels in reading. They were aware of some
of the factors that were necessary in learning to read but these had not been
explicit. Teachers need to share this information with students. Students need to
be taught the skills and explicit strategies that allow and encourage them to
persevere, succeed and take control of their own learning to read. |
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