• 제목/요약/키워드: 문해 발달 태도

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저소득 가정 부모의 문해 발달 태도 및 가정 문해 활동과 유아의 어휘력, 인쇄물 개념간의 관계 (Parents' Attitudes Towards Emergent Literacy, Home Literacy Activity and Children's Vocabulary, Concepts about Print in Low-Income Families)

  • 신혜영;김명순
    • 아동학회지
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    • 제29권4호
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    • pp.199-212
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    • 2008
  • Relationships between parents' home literacy attitudes in low-income families and children's emergent literacy were studied with 107 children 4- and 5-years of age and their parents. Instruments were Kim and Kwon's (2006) questionnaire about parents' literacy attitudes, the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-Revised(Kim et al., 1995) and the Concepts About Print(CAP; Kim & Kim, 2004). Results showed that parents of younger children were positive about reading books; parents of older children were positive about reading instruction. More positive parental feelings about reading and higher frequencies of reading with the child were related to children's higher vocabulary scores. Children's CAP was positively related with amount of parents' reading instruction, home literacy resources, and number of child's books in the home.

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어머니와 아버지의 아동 문해 발달에 대한 태도 및 가정 문해환경 (The Differences in Attitudes toward children s Emergent Literacy between Mothers and fathers and Their-Home Literacy Environments)

  • 김명순;권희경
    • 대한가정학회지
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    • 제40권1호
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    • pp.147-162
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    • 2002
  • The purpose of the study was to investigate the differences in attitudes toward emergent literacy between mothers and fathers in relation to two types of early educational centers and to explore relationships between the parents' attitudes toward literacy and their home literacy environment. The subjects were 1626 parents (813 mothers, 813 fathers), who had three to five years old children, from 14 kindergartens and 11 daycare centers in Seoul. The questionnaire based on Kwon's instrument of emergent literacy altitude (1999) was used. The data were analyzed by two-way ANOVAS, and correlation. The results were as follows : First, there were significant differences in attitudes toward literacy between the mothers and the fathers in relation to their children's ages. The parents of three-year-old children had more positive altitudes toward literacy than ones of five-year-old. The mothers had more positive altitudes toward literacy than the fathers, excepts in reading instructions and writing development. Second, the fathers with daughters had more positive attitudes toward literacy than ones with sons. Third, the kindergarten parents had more positive attitudes toward literacy than daycare parents. Fourth, there were significantly positive correlations between the parents' attitudes toward emergent literacy for young children and their home literacy environments.