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A Crossnational Analysis of Parental Involvement and Student Literacy

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Title: A Crossnational Analysis of Parental Involvement and Student Literacy


1
A Cross-national Analysis of Parental Involvement
and Student Literacy
  • Lina Guzman1,
  • Gillian Hampden-Thompson2,
  • and Laura Lippman1
  • International Society for Child Indicators
    Conference
  • June 28, 2007
  • 1 Child Trends
  • 2 American Institutes of Research

2
Background
  • Researchers at Child Trends are interested in
    family strengths, conceptualized as behaviors,
    processes, and relationship characteristics that
    support family functioning and foster well-being.
  • Family strength is promoted through activities
    such as spending time together, communicating,
    and participating in a variety of cultural and
    educational activities.
  • Participation in these activities is a more
    direct measure of parenting, in contrast to proxy
    measures such as family structure and income.
  • U.S. studies have found that these aspects of
    parent involvement are related to positive
    outcomes such as literacy.

3
Research questions
  • Does parent involvement vary across countries?
  • Is there a consistent relationship between parent
    involvement and literacy across countries?
  • Does the relationship vary by type of literacy
    (reading, math, or science)?
  • Is the relationship between parent involvement
    and literacy stronger or weaker in the U.S. than
    in other countries?

4
Program for International Student Assessment
(PISA)
  • OECD study conducted in 43 countries
  • Assess 15-year-olds literacy in reading, math,
    and science
  • Literacy everyday knowledge rather than
    curricular-based learning
  • Data collection occurs every three years,
    focusing on one subject area per cycle
  • Current study utilizes 2000 data from 21
    countries
  • represents advanced industrialized countries
    comparable to the U.S.
  • geographic regions of North America, Western and
    Eastern Europe (including Russia), and the
    Pacific
  • 2000 wave used because it contained the parent
    involvement measures (which were dropped in later
    years)

5
PISA countries in the current analysis
6
Parent involvement measures
  • As part of the assessment, students were asked
    about
  • Social Communication
  • Eating meal with parent
  • Talking generally with parent
  • Cultural Communication
  • Discussing books, films, or television with
    parent
  • Discussing political or social issues with parent
  • Educational involvement
  • Parental help with homework

7
Theoretical framework
8
Methodology
  • Outcomes Assessment scores for reading, math,
    and science literacy
  • Predictors Three types of parental involvement
  • Analysis
  • OLS regression estimate relationship between
    parental involvement and three literacy domains
    for each country
  • HLM compare relationship between parental
    involvement and literacy across countries

9
Communication across countries
  • First, does the frequency of communication
    between parents and 15-year-olds, as well as the
    extent of homework assistance, vary across
    countries?
  • The frequency of communication activities is
    similar across countries
  • Eating meals (most frequent communication
    activity)
  • Discussing general issues
  • Discussing political or social issues
  • Discussing books, films, or television (least
    frequent communication activity)
  • The frequency with which parents help with
    homework varies more across countries than the
    communication activities

10
Eating meals
Several times a week
Several times a month
Once a month
Few times a year
Never
Note Graph reflects unweighted means
11
Discussing general issues
Several times a week
Several times a month
Once a month
Few times a year
Never
Note Graph reflects unweighted means
12
Discussing political or social issues
Several times a week
Several times a month
Once a month
Few times a year
Never
Note Graph reflects unweighted means
13
Discussing books, films, or television
Several times a week
Several times a month
Once a month
Few times a year
Never
Note Graph reflects unweighted means
14
Homework assistance
Several times a week
Several times a month
Once a month
Few times a year
Never
Note Graph reflects unweighted means
15
Literacy across countries
  • Reading literacy
  • Higher scores than math and science
  • Range 462 to 549
  • Math literacy
  • Range 447 to 538
  • Science literacy
  • Range 460 to 538

16
Reading literacy across countries
17
Math literacy across countries
18
Science literacy across countries
19
Social communication and reading literacy across
countries
  • At least one measure of social communication
    (eating meals together and general talking) is
    positively related to reading literacy in 20
    countries (all except Italy).
  • Eating meals together is significantly associated
    with higher literacy in 16 countries.
  • Talking about general topics has a less
    consistent relationship with reading literacy,
    but is still significantly related to higher
    literacy in 11 countries.

20
Cultural communication and reading literacy
across countries
  • Discussions about books, film, or TV are
    positively (and significantly) related to reading
    literacy in 20 countries (all except New
    Zealand).
  • Discussions about political or social issues is
    positively and significantly associated with
    higher reading literacy in all 21 countries.

21
Homework help and reading literacy across
countries
  • Frequent homework help is significantly related
    to lower levels of reading literacy in all 21
    countries.
  • OLS coefficients range from -6.10 to -15.89
  • The relationship is strongest in Australia,
    Sweden, the U.K., and the U.S. (meaning more
    parental help was associated with even lower
    reading literacy).
  • The relationship is weakest in Portugal and
    Spain.
  • This finding corroborates other research
  • Suggests that students who need more help have
    parents who are more involved with helping them.

22
Do relationships vary by subject?
  • The relationships between parent involvement and
    literacy are in the same direction, but are less
    consistent for math and science literacy.
  • Engaging in political and social discussions and
    eating with parents are both consistently
    associated with higher literacy in all three
    domains.
  • Discussing general issues and books, etc. are
    also associated with higher literacy, though not
    as frequently as other forms of communication.
  • However, the relationship between parental
    involvement and literacy is most consistent and
    strongest with reading.
  • For example, discussing books, films, and TV is
    related to higher reading literacy in 20
    countries, higher math literacy in 7 countries,
    and higher science literacy in 12 countries.

23
Cross-national relationship between parent
involvement and literacy
  • The relationship is relatively consistent across
    the 21 countries. Net of family background and
    SES, students in most countries who have higher
    levels of social and cultural communications with
    their parents have higher literacy levels in all
    three subjects.
  • Parental help with homework is related to lower
    literacy, which is likely indicative of parental
    response to lower achievement.
  • U.S. compared to other countries in the
    relationship between parent involvement and
    reading literacy
  • U.S. adolescents benefit less (in terms of the
    effect of communication on literacy) from eating
    with a parent and from political and social
    discussions.
  • U.S. adolescents benefit more from discussing
    books, films, and television.
  • General discussion has the same effect.

24
Conclusions
  • Parental involvement in the specific form of
    social and cultural communication is associated
    with higher literacy among 15-year-olds in the
    majority of countries.
  • Parental communication is positively related to
    literacy across countries, though more so for
    reading literacy than for math and science.
  • Homework help is inversely related to literacy,
    corroborating prior research.
  • Students benefit from varied and multiple types
    of communication. General discussion is not as
    consistently related to higher literacy,
    therefore parents need to be encouraged to talk
    about specific topics of discussion.
  • Talking to kids about books, film, and even
    television, or discussing political or social
    issues, has a greater effect than just eating
    together and more general conversation.
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