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Showing all 12 results Save | Export
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Kym Simoncini; Jacqueline McKechnie; Catherine Hilly; Bernadette Matthews – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
Families are children's first and most important teachers. However, their ability to support children's learning and development at home varies due to knowledge, skills, and confidence. Family interventions aimed at increasing parents' skills are labour-intensive and expensive. In contrast, text messages are low-cost and scalable. Text messages…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Family Involvement
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Dede Yildirim, Elif; Blake, Corinne; Roopnarine, Jaipaul L. – Early Education and Development, 2023
Maternal reports from the UNICEF Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys were determined whether preschool enrollment strengthened the associations between paternal, maternal, and allocaregivers' (e.g. grandparents, aunts, uncles) engagement in literacy-type and social activities and children's literacy and social skills. The sample consisted of 47,832…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Family Involvement, Literacy Education, Socioeconomic Status
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Flecha, Ainhoa; Garcia, Rocio; Rudd, Rima – European Journal of Education, 2011
Health literacy has firmly established the links between literacy skills and health outcomes and is subsequently considered a key strategy for improving the health of disadvantaged populations and addressing social inequality. However, current research findings for improving health literacy have primarily focused on adults and actions within…
Descriptors: Health Promotion, Family Involvement, Foreign Countries, Literacy
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Feiler, Anthony – British Journal of Special Education, 2003
A project provided weekly home visits to support two children at risk of struggling with literacy during their first year at school. Results found the two families in the project responded positively to the home visits and maintained their engagement, and that the intervention was effective. (Contains references.) (CR)
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Elementary Education, Family Involvement, Foreign Countries
Gregory, Eve – 1998
This paper argues for the need to move beyond the paradigm of parental involvement in reading, which presently informs home/school reading programs for linguistic minority children in the United Kingdom (UK). The first part of the paper examines the literature informing the current model showing the marked absence of studies on the role played by…
Descriptors: Family Influence, Family Involvement, Foreign Countries, Language Minorities
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Lennox, Sandra – Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 1995
Studied the interactions, goals, and purposes of four mothers as they shared two narrative and two expository texts with their preschoolers. Results suggest that there is no one path to becoming literate, nor one single "correct" model of development. Literacy learning is an activity that involves the collaboration of parents and…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Emergent Literacy, Family Environment, Family Involvement
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Spreadbury, Julie – Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 1995
Examined the reasons parents read to their children using interviews from 25 Brisbane parents. Reasons given for reading aloud to their children were categorized under the following five main headings: pleasure for the child, functionality, good start at school, closeness, and quiet time. Concludes with a discussion of the practical implications…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Family Environment, Family Involvement, Foreign Countries
Sartain, Harry W., Ed. – 1981
Noting that the task of increasing literacy around the world is far too massive for the schools alone to undertake, this book is intended as part of an effort to increase the role of parents and families in promoting the reading development of children. The six articles in the book discuss the following topics: (1) family contributions to reading…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Developing Nations, Elementary Education, Family Involvement
DeDeo, Carrie-Anne, Ed. – Harvard Family Research Project, 2007
This double issue of "The Evaluation Exchange" focuses on one of the central components of complementary learning: family involvement. As outlined in the Theory & Practice article, investments in family involvement are important across ages and settings and through the co-constructed efforts and shared responsibilities of many…
Descriptors: Family Involvement, Parent School Relationship, Transitional Programs, Kindergarten
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Freebody, Peter – Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 1995
Explores the proposition that young children need to discover and actively participate in adults' theories of childhood. Reveals ways in which children collaborate in and sometimes contest the need to display precompetent identities, and briefly discusses the consequences, for enculturation in general and for schoolwork in particular, of failing…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Early Experience, Emergent Literacy, Family Involvement
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Guha, Smita – Childhood Education, 2002
Describes the founding and role of the nonprofit organization Udbhas, which promotes literacy among children in the slums of Calcutta while providing a level of food, clothing, and social and educational experiences generally absent from their homes. Discusses the children's background and identifies problems in bringing learning to these…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Community Involvement, Discovery Processes, Educational Experience
Schallert, Diane L., Ed.; Fairbanks, Colleen M., Ed.; Worthy, Jo, Ed.; Maloch, Beth, Ed.; Hoffman, James V., Ed. – National Reading Conference, 2002
This volume presents the 51st Yearbook of the National Reading Conference. Included in this volume are 28 research reports, six invited and award-winning addresses, and a conference summary by Deborah Dillion. Readers will find quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-methods studies throughout the volume about topics ranging from early literacy…
Descriptors: Professional Development, Core Curriculum, Reading Research, Yearbooks