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Journal ArticleDOI

Parental Involvement in the Development of Children’s Reading Skill: A Five-Year Longitudinal Study

Monique Sénéchal, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2002 - 
- Vol. 73, Iss: 2, pp 445-460
TLDR
The findings of the final phase of a 5-year longitudinal study with 168 middle- and upper middle-class children showed that children's exposure to books was related to the development of vocabulary and listening comprehension skills, and that these language skills were directly related to children's reading in grade 3.
Abstract
This article presents the findings of the final phase of a 5-year longitudinal study with 168 middle- and upper middle-class children in which the complex relations among early home literacy experiences, subsequent receptive language and emergent literacy skills, and reading achievement were examined. Results showed that children's exposure to books was related to the development of vocabulary and listening comprehension skills, and that these language skills were directly related to children's reading in grade 3. In contrast, parent involvement in teaching children about reading and writing words was related to the development of early literacy skills. Early literacy skills directly predicted word reading at the end of grade 1 and indirectly predicted reading in grade 3. Word reading at the end of grade 1 predicted reading comprehension in grade 3. Thus, the various pathways that lead to fluent reading have their roots in different aspects of children's early experiences.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Oral language and code-related precursors to reading: Evidence from a longitudinal structural model.

TL;DR: This study examined code-related and oral language precursors to reading in a longitudinal study of 626 children from preschool through 4th grade, demonstrating that there is a high degree of continuity over time of both code- related and Oral language abilities.
Journal ArticleDOI

The How, Whom, and Why of Parents’ Involvement in Children’s Academic Lives: More Is Not Always Better

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors make the case that consideration of the how, whom, and why of parents' involvement in children's academic lives is critical to maximizing the benefits of education.
Journal ArticleDOI

To read or not to read: A meta-analysis of print exposure from infancy to early adulthood.

TL;DR: It is concluded that shared book reading to preconventional readers may be part of a continuum of out-of-school reading experiences that facilitate children's language, reading, and spelling achievement throughout their development.
Journal ArticleDOI

What's Meaning Got to Do With It: The Role of Vocabulary in Word Reading and Reading Comprehension

TL;DR: In this article, the role of oral vocabulary in various reading skills was discussed in terms of interrelations between phonological and semantic factors in the acquisition of distinct reading skills, including receptive and expressive vocabulary breadth, depth of vocabulary knowledge, decoding, visual word recognition, and reading comprehension.
Journal ArticleDOI

Promoting Academic and Social‐Emotional School Readiness: The Head Start REDI Program

TL;DR: Results revealed significant differences favoring children in the enriched intervention classrooms on measures of vocabulary, emergent literacy, emotional understanding, social problem solving, social behavior, and learning engagement.
References
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Book

Using multivariate statistics

TL;DR: In this Section: 1. Multivariate Statistics: Why? and 2. A Guide to Statistical Techniques: Using the Book Research Questions and Associated Techniques.
Book

Questionnaire Design, Interviewing and Attitude Measurement

TL;DR: The second edition of Dr Bram Oppenheim's established work, like the first, is a practical teaching text of survey methods as mentioned in this paper, which includes interviewing (both clip-board and depth interviewing), sampling and research design, data analysis, and a special chapter on pilot work.
Journal ArticleDOI

Child development and emergent literacy

TL;DR: It is proposed that emergent literacy consists of at least two distinct domains: inside-out skills and outside-in skills, which appear to be influential at different points in time during reading acquisition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Joint Book Reading Makes for Success in Learning to Read: A Meta-Analysis on Intergenerational Transmission of Literacy

TL;DR: In this paper, a quantitative meta-analysis of the available empirical evidence related to parent-preschooler reading and several outcome measures is presented. And the results support the hypothesis that book reading is related to outcome measures such as language growth, emergent literacy and reading achievement.

Joint book reading makes for success in learning to read

TL;DR: The results support the hypothesis that book reading, in particular, affects acquisition of the written language register and the effect seems to become smaller as soon as children become conventional readers and are able to read on their own.
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