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The importance of parental involvement in enhancing children’s literacy level

Children’s home reading under parental supervision can supplement in-class reading. A paper published in the Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness investigated the effects of a one-year parental involvement intervention on the development of primary school children’s reading skills.

The researchers adopted school-level cluster randomization and recruited 600 grade 2 students from Tanzania (12 experimental schools, 264 students; 12 control schools, 336 students). Groups were similar in terms of child’s gender, parent’s gender, parental educational level, and parental income. The intervention incorporated four parts: training sessions for teachers and parents; parents’ and children’s shared reading at home; partnership between parents and teachers; and parental involvement in children’s homework.

Outcomes of interest included three dimensions of reading achievement: word decoding, reading fluency, and reading comprehension.

This research reinforces the importance of parental involvement in children’s literacy development. The researchers also suggest that good teacher-parent partnership could elicit stronger effects.

 

Source: Kigobe, J., Van den Noortgate, W., Ligembe, N., Ogondiek, M., Ghesquière, P., & Van Leeuwen, K. (2021). Effects of a Parental Involvement Intervention to Promote Child Literacy in Tanzania: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial. Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, 0(0), 1–22. https://doi.org/10.1080/19345747.2021.1931998

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