Abstract

It is well established that emergent literacy is a strong predictor of later reading difficulties, and that the home literacy environment plays an important role in the development of children’s preschool emergent literacy and oral language. Furthermore, reading difficulties runs in families and children with a family risk of reading difficulties tend to show delays in emergent literacy and might experience a less advantageous home literacy environment. This study examined whether family risk predicts children’s second-grade reading difficulties in a multifactorial model including both emergent literacy and environmental protective factors such as home literacy environment and parental level of education. Children were assessed for emergent literacy at the beginning of first grade, and were identified as having reading difficulties at the end of second grade if they performed below the national threshold in at least three of the subtests in reading and spelling. The multifactorial model suggested that children with family risk showed reading difficulties that could not be explained in terms of individual differences in emergent literacy, gender, interest in literacy, years in kindergarten, home literacy environment or parental education level. These findings highlight the advantages of using multifactorial models of reading difficulties that encompass different domains of genetic, cognitive-based and environmental factors. In sum, not only did we find family risk is associated with children’s literacy outcomes after 2 years of formal reading instruction, but we also identified possible modifiable factors that may benefit from interventions and lessen the likelihood of developing reading difficulties.

Highlights

  • Literacy skills provide a crucial foundation for children’s later success in educational, professional and everyday settings

  • Children who did not meet this criterion were categorized as typical readers (TR): 147 children in the Not-family risk (FR) group and 36 children in FR group

  • Most importantly, teachers and practitioners should be aware that the risk of developing later Reading difficulties (RD) is almost three times higher for FR children with emergent literacy difficulties compared with Not-FR children with emergent literacy difficulties

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Literacy skills provide a crucial foundation for children’s later success in educational, professional and everyday settings. While most children learn to read and write successfully, some experience reading and writing difficulties. The prevalence of reading difficulties across the domains of reading, spelling and reading comprehension is 5–15% among school-age children across different languages and cultures (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). Reading difficulties (RD), or dyslexia, has many definitions and different criteria. In general RD refers to unexpected impairments in the process of reading and spelling acquisition which are not due to extraneous factors like sensory intelligence, acuity deficits, socioeconomic disadvantage, and similar factors (Vellutino, Fletcher, Snowling, & Scanlon, 2004). There is accumulating evidence that RD can be prevented in many children through early intervention (Fletcher, Lyon, Fuchs, & Barnes, 2007; Lovett et al, 2017; Torgesen, 2002), and this means that early prediction of RD or identification of at-risk children is of both theoretical and practical interest

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call