Abstract

The home learning environment includes what parents do to stimulate children’s literacy and numeracy skills at home and their overall beliefs and attitudes about children’s learning. The home literacy and numeracy environments are two of the most widely discussed aspects of the home learning environment, and past studies have identified how socioeconomic status and parents’ own abilities and interest in these domains also play a part in shaping children’s learning experiences. However, these studies are mostly from the West, and there has been little focus on the situation of homes in Asia, which captures a large geographical area and a wide diversity of social, ethnic, and linguistic groups. Therefore, this paper aims to review extant studies on the home literacy and numeracy environments that have been conducted in different parts of Asia, such as China, the Philippines, India, Iran, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates. Specifically, we explore how parents in these places perceive their roles in children’s early literacy and numeracy development, the methods they regard as effective for promoting young children’s literacy and numeracy learning, and the frequency with which they engage their young children in different types of home literacy and numeracy activities. We also examine studies on the relationship of the home literacy and numeracy environment with young children’s developmental outcomes, and the effectiveness of parent training programs to improve the home literacy and numeracy environments in these contexts. By examining potential trends in findings obtained in different geographical areas, we can initially determine whether there are characteristics that are potentially unique to contexts in Asia. We propose future research directions that acknowledge the role of cultural values and social factors in shaping the home learning environment, and, by extension, in facilitating children’s early literacy and numeracy development.

Highlights

  • The home learning environment encompasses the beliefs and attitudes that parents hold about children’s learning, as well as their practices for helping children to learn at home (Dearing and Tang, 2009)

  • The majority of studies and frameworks that inform our understanding of home literacy and numeracy environments have been conducted in Western societies; relatively little attention has been given to the situation in Asia

  • What kinds of home literacy and numeracy interventions have been implemented in Asia and are they effective? Based on the studies considered for this review, we identified two types of intervention programs that aimed to improve children’s literacy and numeracy skills

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Summary

Introduction

The home learning environment encompasses the beliefs and attitudes that parents hold about children’s learning, as well as their practices for helping children to learn at home (Dearing and Tang, 2009). The majority of studies and frameworks that inform our understanding of home literacy and numeracy environments have been conducted in Western societies; relatively little attention has been given to the situation in Asia. This matters because from theoretical perspectives, culture plays a critical role in the home environments and child development. Literacy (which can broadly include reading, mathematical, as well as scientific literacies) is one kind of cultural practices, and it can be conceptualized as the skills necessary for a specific place at a particular time point to meet certain purposes (Street, 1993; Kell and Kell, 2014). In light of the above, joint parent-child literacy and numeracy activities have the potential to contribute to children’s acquisition of literacy and numeracy skills; the content of the activities and the knowledge derived from the activities may vary across families, communities, and the wider sociocultural contexts

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