Does Preschool Education Moderate the Associations Between Paternal, Maternal, and Allocaregivers’ Engagement and Children’s Literacy and Social Skills in African Countries?

IF 2.1 3区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
E. Dede Yildirim, Corinne Blake, J. L. Roopnarine
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT 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 mother-father pairs, other household members, and preschool-aged children in cultural communities in 14 African countries. Research Findings: Household resources, educational attainment, and educational materials were consistent predictors of children’s literacy and social skills. Children whose mothers, fathers, and allocaregivers read to them and who were in preschool performed better on the literacy skills assessments than those whose caregivers did not read to them and did not attend preschool. Reading was a better predictor of children’s literacy skills than storytelling or naming/counting objects. Preschool enrollment appears to be a better predictor of children’s literacy and social skills than caregiver engagement. Practice and Policy: Expanding literacy materials, encouraging father involvement, and sustaining collaborations between parents and allocaregivers with preschool programs may help to cultivate children's social and literacy skills.
在非洲国家,学前教育是否调节了父亲、母亲和分配者的参与与儿童识字和社交技能之间的关系?
摘要联合国儿童基金会多指标集群调查的产妇报告确定了学前教育入学是否加强了父亲、母亲和分配者(如祖父母、阿姨、叔叔)参与识字类型和社会活动与儿童识字和社会技能之间的联系。样本包括14个非洲国家文化社区的47832对父母、其他家庭成员和学龄前儿童。研究结果:家庭资源、教育程度和教育材料是儿童识字率和社会技能的一致预测因素。母亲、父亲和授课者为他们朗读的儿童以及在幼儿园的儿童在识字技能评估中的表现要好于那些照顾者没有为他们朗读且没有上幼儿园的儿童。阅读比讲故事或命名/计数物体更能预测孩子的识字能力。学龄前入学似乎比照顾者参与更能预测儿童的识字率和社交技能。实践与政策:扩大识字材料,鼓励父亲参与,并通过学前教育项目维持父母和授课者之间的合作,可能有助于培养儿童的社交和识字技能。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
10.30%
发文量
78
期刊介绍: Early Education and Development (EE&D) is a professional journal for those involved in educational and preschool services and research related to children and their families: early education supervisors, school psychologists, daycare administrators, child development specialists, developmental and child clinical psychologists, and special education administrators. It is designed to emphasize the implications for practice of research and solid scientific information. The age range focused upon is preschool through the primary grades. EE&D is a connecting link between the research community in early education and child development and school district early education programs, daycare systems, and special needs preschool programs.
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