Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Ridout, Susan Ramp
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 1992
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED345216
Tags: Ajouter un tag
Pas de tags, Soyez le premier à ajouter un tag!
_version_ 1867181710239596544
author Ridout, Susan Ramp
author_facet Ridout, Susan Ramp
Ridout, Susan Ramp
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Do Children Come By Their Reading Problems Honestly? Ridout, Susan Ramp Elementary Education Parent Attitudes Parent Education Parent Student Relationship Reading Aloud to Others Reading Attitudes Reading Difficulties Reading Habits Reading Research Remedial Reading Surveys A study examined parents' attitudes toward reading and their children's reading problems, to investigate whether a child's reading problem may simply be a reflection of his or her parent's reading know-how. Subjects, 203 of 218 parents of children attending a university reading clinic, responded to a survey. Data were collected over the course of eight reading clinic sessions held at the Indiana University Southeast campus in New Albany, Indiana. Results indicated that: (1) parents who brought their children to the reading clinic tended to believe that their child had a "medium" reading problem; (2) the parents appeared to use the library very little; and (3) parents read to and were read to by their children very little. Findings suggest that parents need more tips and strategies to help their children with reading problems. (Five tables of data are included.) (RS)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED345216
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1992
record_format eric
spellingShingle Do Children Come By Their Reading Problems Honestly?
Ridout, Susan Ramp
Elementary Education
Parent Attitudes
Parent Education
Parent Student Relationship
Reading Aloud to Others
Reading Attitudes
Reading Difficulties
Reading Habits
Reading Research
Remedial Reading
Surveys
Do Children Come By Their Reading Problems Honestly? Ridout, Susan Ramp Elementary Education Parent Attitudes Parent Education Parent Student Relationship Reading Aloud to Others Reading Attitudes Reading Difficulties Reading Habits Reading Research Remedial Reading Surveys A study examined parents' attitudes toward reading and their children's reading problems, to investigate whether a child's reading problem may simply be a reflection of his or her parent's reading know-how. Subjects, 203 of 218 parents of children attending a university reading clinic, responded to a survey. Data were collected over the course of eight reading clinic sessions held at the Indiana University Southeast campus in New Albany, Indiana. Results indicated that: (1) parents who brought their children to the reading clinic tended to believe that their child had a "medium" reading problem; (2) the parents appeared to use the library very little; and (3) parents read to and were read to by their children very little. Findings suggest that parents need more tips and strategies to help their children with reading problems. (Five tables of data are included.) (RS)
title Do Children Come By Their Reading Problems Honestly?
topic Elementary Education
Parent Attitudes
Parent Education
Parent Student Relationship
Reading Aloud to Others
Reading Attitudes
Reading Difficulties
Reading Habits
Reading Research
Remedial Reading
Surveys
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED345216