An evaluation of Headsprout early reading as an online parent-mediated intervention for primary school children

IF 1.1 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Emma Gillespie, Victoria Markham, Aoife Mc Tiernan
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Abstract

Due to the Coronavirus pandemic and lengthy absences from the classroom, there is a need for large-scale remedial programs to support young children to “catch-up” on literacy and numeracy skills. A stratified randomized controlled trial was used to evaluate the Headsprout Early Reading (HER) program as a parent-mediated digital literacy intervention. A between-groups design compared differences in reading-dependent outcome measures for 36 children assigned to one of three intervention groups: with support, without support, and waitlist-control. Children completed significantly more episodes when parents received implementation support from the researcher compared to the without support group. Children receiving Headsprout instructions demonstrated marginally greater gains than the waitlist-control group in posttest outcome measures; however, differences in reading outcomes were not significant between groups at posttesting. The current research provides tentative support for HER and importantly, highlights the importance of providing support for parents implementing interventions at home.

Abstract Image

Headspread早期阅读作为一种在线家长干预措施对小学生的评估
由于冠状病毒大流行和长时间缺课,需要开展大规模的补救计划,以支持幼儿“赶上”识字和算术技能。一项分层随机对照试验被用于评估作为父母介导的数字扫盲干预的头芽早期阅读(HER)计划。一项组间设计比较了36名儿童在阅读依赖性结果测量方面的差异,这些儿童被分配到三个干预组之一:有支持、无支持和等待名单控制。与没有支持的组相比,当父母从研究人员那里获得实施支持时,儿童完成的事件明显更多。接受头芽指令的儿童在测试后结果测量中表现出比等待名单对照组略大的收获;然而,在后测中,各组之间的阅读结果差异并不显著。目前的研究为HER提供了初步支持,重要的是,强调了为父母在家实施干预措施提供支持的重要性。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)
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来源期刊
Behavioral Interventions
Behavioral Interventions PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
20.00%
发文量
66
期刊介绍: Behavioral Interventions aims to report research and practice involving the utilization of behavioral techniques in the treatment, education, assessment and training of students, clients or patients, as well as training techniques used with staff. Behavioral Interventions publishes: (1) research articles, (2) brief reports (a short report of an innovative technique or intervention that may be less rigorous than a research report), (3) topical literature reviews and discussion articles, (4) book reviews.
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