The Effect of Family Literacy Interventions on Children's Acquisition of Reading: From Kindergarten to Grade 3

Resource type
Dataset
Author/contributor
Title
The Effect of Family Literacy Interventions on Children's Acquisition of Reading: From Kindergarten to Grade 3
Abstract
Goal. Educators believe that parents can help their children learn to read. But what evidence supports this belief? And if parent involvement does matter, what kinds of parent involvement are most efficient? The goal of this report was to review the scientific literature on parent involvement in the acquisition of reading from kindergarten to grade 3. Method. In the present review, parent involvement in literacy acquisition was narrowly defined to include parent-child activities that focus on reading. Moreover, the 14 studies that were analyzed were those that included an intervention where researchers tested whether parent involvement enhanced children’s literacy. Standard meta-analytic procedures were used to analyze the study outcomes.
Date
2006
Repository
American Psychological Association
Accessed
17/08/2021, 13:31
Short Title
The Effect of Family Literacy Interventions on Children's Acquisition of Reading
Language
en
Library Catalogue
DOI.org (Crossref)
Extra
8 citations (Crossref) [2024-02-28]
Citation
Senechal, M. (2006). The Effect of Family Literacy Interventions on Children’s Acquisition of Reading: From Kindergarten to Grade 3. American Psychological Association. https://doi.org/10.1037/e573272006-001