• Title/Summary/Keyword: Home Literacy Environment Rating Scale

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The Development and Validity of the Home Literacy Environment Rating Scale (유아를 위한 가정문해환경 평정척도 개발 및 타당화 연구)

  • Park, Chan-Hwa;Kim, Gil-Sook
    • Journal of the Korean Home Economics Association
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    • v.46 no.9
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    • pp.87-97
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    • 2008
  • This study was conducted to develop the Home Literacy Environment Rating Scale(HLERS) and to analyze its item discrimination, reliability, and validity. The participants of this study were 438 parents whose children were three to five years old. The item discrimination, determined by comparing the highest and lowest group using Chi-square($x^2$) and Cramer's V, was found to be satisfactory. The Cronbach's $\alpha$ for internal consistency reliability was .78. Factor analysis revealed that the structure of the HLERS consisted of three factors: 'reading books,' 'reading behavior and modeling of parents' and 'literacy learning.' The concurrent validity was also identified by correlation between the HLERS and two sub-tests of EC-HOME. In conclusion, these results demonstrated that the Home Literacy Environment Rating Scale is reliable and valid to examine the home literacy environment for Korean families.

The Influences of the Home and the Classroom Literacy Environment on Preschool Children's Story Comprehension (가정문해환경과 교실문해환경이 유아의 이야기 이해력에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Gil-Sook;Kim, Myoung-Soon
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.31 no.2
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    • pp.119-133
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    • 2010
  • The purpose of this study was to examine how the home and classroom literacy environment affect preschool children's story comprehension. The subjects were 213 pairs of children (aged 4-5) and their mothers, and 107 classrooms. The Home Literacy Environment Rating Scale (Park & Kim, 2008), Classroom Literacy Environment Observation Scale (Kim, Kim, Im, & Lee, 2008) and the Children's Comprehension Ability Test (Jung & Kim, 2003) were used in this study. The collected data were analyzed by means of two-way ANOVA, partial correlations, Pearson correlations, hierarchical regressions. Our results indicated that preschool children's story comprehension increases when both home and classroom literacy environment are well resourced and supported. In particular, it is essential that parents spend as much time as possible reading books with their children and that teachers provide children with an amply resourced literacy environment together with appropriate activities in class geared towards story comprehension improvement.