PARENTAL GOALS FOR SHARED READING ACROSS THE PRIMARY GRADES - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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PARENTAL GOALS FOR SHARED READING ACROSS THE PRIMARY GRADES

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... SK,1, 2, 3) and goal area (bond, soothe, foster reading, stimulation, enjoyment) ... stimulate read bond enjoy soothe. ABRI -0.080 0.147 -0.134 0.004 -0.153. Sig. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PARENTAL GOALS FOR SHARED READING ACROSS THE PRIMARY GRADES


1
PARENTAL GOALS FOR SHARED READING ACROSS THE
PRIMARY GRADES
  • Presented at the Annual CLLRNET Conference
  • June 18-20 2006, Charlottetown, PEI

Diana Audet, Mary Ann Evans, Karen
Mitchell University of Guelph
2
What Does the Research Say About Parent-Child
Shared Book Reading?
3
  • The role parents have in their childrens
    literacy development
  • e.g., Beals De Temple 1993 Dickinson Tabors,
    1991 Evans, Shaw, Bell, 2000 Lee Croninger,
    1994 Roberts, Jurgens, Burchinal, 2005
    Weinberger, 1996

4
  • The nature of the benefits of shared book reading
    between parent and child
  • Which features of this interaction contribute the
    most to the development of various aspects of
    childrens literacy skills
  • e.g., Hayden Fagan, 1983 Pellegrini, Brody,
    Sigel, 1985 Sénéchal, LeFevre, Hudson, Lawson,
    1996

5
  • Parents vary in their interactions with their
    children during shared book reading
  • e.g., Haden, Reese, Fivush, 1996 Hammett,
    VanKleeck, Huberty, 2003 Mansell, Evans,
    Hamilton-Hulak, 2005 Reese, Cox, Harte,
    McAnally, 2003
  • These different interactions contribute in
    diverse ways and to varying degrees to childrens
    literacy development
  • e.g., Bergin, 2001 DeTemple, 2001 Reese Cox,
    1999 Stoltz Fischel, 2003

6
What Dont We Know About Parent-Child Shared Book
Reading?
7
  • What are the factors that influence how parents
    interact with their children?
  • Or, why do parents display specific behaviours at
    specific points during shared book reading?
  • What are the goals parents have for reading with
    their children and how do these goals shape the
    quality of the shared reading experience?

8
The Current Study
9
  • To investigate the types of goals that parents
    have for reading with their children, and how
    these goals may change across the early school
    grades
  • This will help inform our understanding of how
    parents choose books and elaborate on the text
    and pictures of books when reading with their
    child

10
Method
11
  • Parents of 321 children from junior kindergarten
    through grade 3 rated items pertaining to various
    goals for shared reading (Shared Book Reading
    Goals Survey, Evans Williamson, 2003)
  • These items reflect possible purposes parents
    might have for reading with their child

12
  • Parents also completed the survey Approaches to
    Beginning Reading and Reading Instruction (ABRRI,
    Evans, Fox, Cremaso McKinnon, 2004)
  • This was to determine whether their view of
    learning to read adhered more to a top-down or
    bottom-up perspective of reading development

13
  • Top-Down Approaches
  • Constructivist View Stress the importance of
    general world knowledge and general knowledge
    about textual and linguistic structures
  • Bottom-Up Approaches
  • Graphophonemic View Stress the automatic and
    efficient recoding of print into a phonological
    code in short term memory for processing of
    meaning

14
Results
15
Subsets of Goals
  • A principal components analysis was conducted
    from which 5 subsets of goals emerged

16
Stimulation
  • Items reflecting parents intentions to expand
    their childs world and expose them to a variety
    of facts, languages, genres, and ideas
  • E.g., for my child to learn about people,
    places, and things to help develop my childs
    problem-solving abilities

17
Foster Reading
  • Items reflecting parents intentions to help
    their child learn to read and to teach and
    monitor the development of their childrens
    literacy skills
  • E.g., to help my child learn to read to help
    my child develop his/her vocabulary (learn new
    words)

18
Bond
  • Items reflecting parents goals to share quality
    time with their child and to strengthen their
    relationship with their child
  • E.g., to experience physical closeness with my
    child to share an activity that I enjoy with
    my child

19
Soothe
  • Items relating to parents goals to soothe their
    child, help their child relax, and to prepare
    their child for bedtime
  • E.g., to develop a predictable routine for
    bedtime to help soothe my child when he/she is
    upset

20
Entertainment
  • Items reflecting intentions to increase their
    childs enjoyment of reading and interest in and
    respect for books
  • E.g., for my child to enjoy hearing a good
    story to increase the chance that my child
    will later read books on his/her own for
    enjoyment

21
Effects of Grade and Type of Goals
  • An ANOVA was conducted using the factors grade
    (JK, SK,1, 2, 3) and goal area (bond, soothe,
    foster reading, stimulation, enjoyment)
  • No effect of grade on the parents ratings
  • There was an effect of the types of goals on the
    ratings parents gave (plt.001)
  • No interaction emerged between the grade level
    and goal subset

22
Goals Endorsed by Grade
  • Paired samples t-tests were conducted to
    determine which goal subsets were significantly
    different from each other (plt.005 as a Bonferroni
    correction)
  • When the data was collapsed across grades, all
    goal subsets were significantly different from
    each other, except bond and enjoyment. These 2
    goals were rated equally highly, and highest, at
    each grade

23
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24
  • For the parents of children in JK, grade 2 and
    grade 3, stimulate and soothe also did not differ
    and were ranked significantly lower from the
    others. Further, for the parents of children in
    JK, stimulation also did not differ from read
  • For the parents of children in grade 1, foster
    reading was rated equally highly as bond and
    enjoyment and higher than stimulation and soothe

25
Top-Down vs. Bottom-Up Approaches to Reading
  • Correlations were computed between the factors
    goal areas (bond, soothe, foster reading,
    stimulation, enjoyment) and the relative emphasis
    parents placed on reading as a top-down,
    constructivist process versus a bottom-up,
    graphophonemic skills-based process
  • Emphasis was operationalized as the difference
    between these two ABBRI scores

26
  • As parents increasingly endorsed a bottom-up
    view, fostering reading as a goal increased, and
    soothing and bonding as goals decreased. However
    these correlations were very modest, although in
    the expected directions

Correlations Between ABRI Scores and Goal
Areas stimulate read bond enjoy soothe ABRI -0.08
0 0.147 -0.134 0.004 -0.153 Sig.
(2-tailed) 0.153 0.009 0.017 0.943 0.006
Correlations Between ABRI Scores and Goal
Areas stimulate read bond enjoy soothe ABRI -0.08
0 0.147 -0.134 0.004 -0.153 Sig.
(2-tailed) 0.153 0.009 0.017 0.943 0.006
27
Summary
28
1
  • The Shared Book Reading Goals Survey (Evans
    Williamson, 2003) produced 5 reliable subsets of
    goals. These reflect 5 general purposes parents
    may have for reading with their child.

29
2
  • The importance parents place on these five
    general purposes for reading with their child
    appears to change in priority relative to the
    grade their child is in. Notably, in grade 1 when
    children are learning to read independently, the
    goal fostering reading increases in relative
    importance.

30
3
  • While the relationships between views of reading
    on the ABBRI and goals for shared book reading
    were in the expected direction, they were modest
    and suggest that each of these areas of attitude
    might make contributions to how parents negotiate
    shared book reading with their child.

31
4
  • In future research, the goal subsets of bond and
    enjoyment can be collapsed together. While these
    may represent two distinct types of purposes,
    they are not rated significantly different by the
    parents of children in any of the grades included
    in the study.

32
  • Discussion
  • Questions
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