Longitudinal relations between parental writing support and preschoolers' language and literacy skills

Lori E. Skibbe*, Samantha W. Bindman, Annemarie H. Hindman, Dorit Aram, Frederick J. Morrison

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

59 Scopus citations

Abstract

Parental writing support was examined over time and in relation to children's language and literacy skills. Seventy-seven parents and their preschoolers were videotaped writing an invitation together twice during one year. Parental writing support was coded at the level of the letter to document parents' graphophonemic support (letter-sound correspondence), print support (letter formation), and demand for precision (expectation for correcting writing errors). Parents primarily relied on only a couple print (i.e., parent writing the letter alone) and graphophonemic (i.e., saying the word as a whole, dictating letters as children write) strategies. Graphophonemic and print support in preschool predicted children's decoding skills, and graphophonemic support also predicted children's future phonological awareness. Neither type of support predicted children's vocabulary scores. Demand for precision occurred infrequently and was unrelated to children's outcomes. Findings demonstrate the importance of parental writing support for augmenting children's literacy skills.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)387-401
Number of pages15
JournalReading Research Quarterly
Volume48
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2013

Keywords

  • Decoding
  • Early childhood
  • Embedded
  • Family literacy
  • Instructional strategies, teaching strategies
  • Invented spelling
  • Parental involvement
  • Phonics, phonemic awareness, phonological awareness
  • Sociocultural
  • Spelling
  • Strategies, methods, and materials
  • Theoretical perspectives
  • To learners in which of the following categories does your work apply?
  • Vocabulary
  • Vygotskian
  • Writing
  • Writing process
  • Writing strategies

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