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Main Authors: Claire Galea, Serje Robidoux, Andrea Salins, Clayton Noble, Genevieve McArthur
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1487251
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author Claire Galea
Serje Robidoux
Andrea Salins
Clayton Noble
Genevieve McArthur
author_facet Claire Galea
Serje Robidoux
Andrea Salins
Clayton Noble
Genevieve McArthur
Claire Galea
Serje Robidoux
Andrea Salins
Clayton Noble
Genevieve McArthur
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Impact of Shared Book Reading on Children and Families: A Study of Dolly Parton's Imagination Library in Tamworth, Australia Claire Galea Serje Robidoux Andrea Salins Clayton Noble Genevieve McArthur Foreign Countries Childrens Literature Reading Programs Reading Aloud to Others Reading Habits Literacy Family Literacy Reading Skills Longitudinal Studies Opportunities Preschool Children Books This longitudinal cohort-study investigated the impact of Dolly Parton's Imagination Library (the Imagination Library) in Tamworth, Australia. The Imagination Library delivers age-appropriate books to children from the time of their birth until their fifth birthday. Caregivers of Tamworth children completed surveys about their experience with the program after receiving one book ("baseline;" N = 343) and then at six months (N = 116) and three years (N = 89). Their responses indicated that children in the Imagination Library were read to more frequently, for longer durations, and had more books in their homes than the average Australian child, as represented by large independent databases. Tamworth caregivers who read to their child at least once a day at baseline were nearly five times more likely to read daily after six months and three years than those who did not read daily at baseline (OR 4.9 (95% CI 1.8,13.7)). Further, children who were read to daily at three years showed more emerging literacy skills than those who were not read to daily. These outcomes suggest that shared book reading generally, and the Imagination Library specifically, encourages sustained reading practices that are associated with developing emerging literacy skills.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1487251
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2025
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Impact of Shared Book Reading on Children and Families: A Study of Dolly Parton's Imagination Library in Tamworth, Australia
Claire Galea
Serje Robidoux
Andrea Salins
Clayton Noble
Genevieve McArthur
Foreign Countries
Childrens Literature
Reading Programs
Reading Aloud to Others
Reading Habits
Literacy
Family Literacy
Reading Skills
Longitudinal Studies
Opportunities
Preschool Children
Books
The Impact of Shared Book Reading on Children and Families: A Study of Dolly Parton's Imagination Library in Tamworth, Australia Claire Galea Serje Robidoux Andrea Salins Clayton Noble Genevieve McArthur Foreign Countries Childrens Literature Reading Programs Reading Aloud to Others Reading Habits Literacy Family Literacy Reading Skills Longitudinal Studies Opportunities Preschool Children Books This longitudinal cohort-study investigated the impact of Dolly Parton's Imagination Library (the Imagination Library) in Tamworth, Australia. The Imagination Library delivers age-appropriate books to children from the time of their birth until their fifth birthday. Caregivers of Tamworth children completed surveys about their experience with the program after receiving one book ("baseline;" N = 343) and then at six months (N = 116) and three years (N = 89). Their responses indicated that children in the Imagination Library were read to more frequently, for longer durations, and had more books in their homes than the average Australian child, as represented by large independent databases. Tamworth caregivers who read to their child at least once a day at baseline were nearly five times more likely to read daily after six months and three years than those who did not read daily at baseline (OR 4.9 (95% CI 1.8,13.7)). Further, children who were read to daily at three years showed more emerging literacy skills than those who were not read to daily. These outcomes suggest that shared book reading generally, and the Imagination Library specifically, encourages sustained reading practices that are associated with developing emerging literacy skills.
title The Impact of Shared Book Reading on Children and Families: A Study of Dolly Parton's Imagination Library in Tamworth, Australia
topic Foreign Countries
Childrens Literature
Reading Programs
Reading Aloud to Others
Reading Habits
Literacy
Family Literacy
Reading Skills
Longitudinal Studies
Opportunities
Preschool Children
Books
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1487251