Abstract:
The purpose of the study was to examine how parents’ involvement
is associated with Grade 4 learners’ reading literacy achievement in
Mpumalanga. Selected variables from the PIRLS 2016 home and
school questionnaires were used, and interviews were conducted
with parents to gain a deeper understanding of parental
involvement in their child’s education in terms of reading literacy.
A sequential explanatory mixed-method design was used based
on the pragmatism paradigm. The quantitative data (1,025
learners) was gathered before the qualitative data (ten parents).
For the quantitative data, multi-level analysis showed that
parents who read books with their child before the child went to
primary school, parents who participated in their child’s reading
outside school hours, and parents being included in their child’s
education by the school are the best predictors of Grade 4
reading literacy achievement. For the qualitative data, the
findings indicated that parents understand that promoting
English as First Additional Language is of great importance;
however, they lack the skills, time and resources to effectively
teach English reading at home. This study suggests that more
research should be conducted on effective parenting strategies at
home to teach their children to read.
Description:
DATA AVAILABITY STATEMENT: Authors wanting to access/work with the PIRLS data have to apply for permission at the Centre for
Evaluation and Assessment (CEA) at the University of Pretoria, South Africa. The authors of this
manuscript received permission from the CEA to analyse the PIRLS 2016 data.