With a little help: improving kindergarten children’s vocabulary by enhancing the home literacy environment

被引:0
作者
Frank Niklas
Wolfgang Schneider
机构
[1] University of Würzburg,Department of Educational Psychology
[2] The University of Melbourne,Melbourne Graduate School of Education
来源
Reading and Writing | 2015年 / 28卷
关键词
Home literacy environment (HLE); Non-intensive intervention; Family literacy programs; Linguistic competencies; Pre-school children;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Early linguistic competencies are necessary prerequisites for later reading and writing abilities and thus for a successful school career. Various child and family characteristics have been identified as important predictors of children’s linguistic abilities, such as intelligence or the “home literacy environment” (HLE). Therefore, one way to improve children’s competencies is by enhancing the HLE they live in. Family literacy programs have proven to be successful with this task. However, most interventions used to improve HLE were fairly intensive and costly. In this study a nonintensive intervention procedure was developed to improve both, HLE and linguistic competencies. The sample consisted of 125 German children in their last year of kindergarten (mean child age at the beginning of the study: 5 years, 5 months) and their families who showed an above average socio-economic status. All parents were offered to participate in the intervention, consisting of providing them with relevant information on HLE at one evening meeting and providing an additional individual reading session that introduced them to the concept of dialogic reading. HLE and children’s linguistic competencies were assessed before and after the intervention. Participating and non-participating families did not differ in any of the study variables at the beginning of the study. However, families who participated in the interventions not only improved their HLE, but children in those families also showed greater linguistic competency development when compared with the non-participating group. The results indicate that less intensive interventions can have an impact on home learning environments and children’s linguistic development.
引用
收藏
页码:491 / 508
页数:17
相关论文
共 112 条
  • [1] Aikens NL(2008)Socioeconomic differences in reading trajectories: The contribution of family, neighborhood, and school contexts Journal of Educational Psychology 100 235-251
  • [2] Barbarin O(1979)Contexts of child rearing: Problems and prospects American Psychologist 34 844-850
  • [3] Bronfenbrenner U(2002)The influence of speech perception, oral language ability, the home literacy environment, and pre-reading knowledge on the growth of phonological sensitivity: A one-year longitudinal investigation Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal 15 709-737
  • [4] Burgess SR(2002)Relations of the home literacy environment (HLE) to the development of reading-related abilities: A one-year longitudinal study Reading Research Quarterly 37 408-426
  • [5] Burgess SR(1995)Joint book reading makes for success in learning to read: A meta-analysis on intergenerational transmission of literacy Review of Educational Research 65 1-21
  • [6] Hecht SA(1996)The effects of a community-based literacy program on young children’s language and conceptual development American Journal of Community Psychology 24 251-272
  • [7] Lonigan CJ(2011)Cognitive and environmental predictors of early literacy skills Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal 24 395-412
  • [8] Bus AG(2001)Lasting effects of home literacy on reading achievement in school Journal of School Psychology 39 389-414
  • [9] van IJzendoorn MH(1994)Reading to preschoolers: A response to Scarborough and Dobrich (1994) and recommendations for future research Developmental Review 14 324-339
  • [10] Pellegrini AD(2012)Spezifische Vorläuferfertigkeiten der Lesegeschwindigkeit, des Leseverständnisses und des Rechtschreibens. Evidenz aus zwei Längsschnittstudien vom Kindergarten bis zur 4. Klasse [Specific precursors of decoding speed, reading comprehension, and spelling: Evidence from two longitudinal studies from kindergarten to Grade 4] Zeitschrift für Entwicklungspsychologie und Pädagogische Psychologie 44 53-67