Suppr超能文献

以儿童为中心的读写能力导向:一种社会资本形式?

Child centered literacy orientation: a form of social capital?

作者信息

High P, Hopmann M, LaGasse L, Sege R, Moran J, Guiterrez C, Becker S

机构信息

Women & Infants' Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island 02905, USA.

出版信息

Pediatrics. 1999 Apr;103(4):e55. doi: 10.1542/peds.103.4.e55.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To describe the home literacy environment and to identify financial, human, and social capital variables associated with the presence or lack of Child Centered Literacy Orientation (CCLO) in families with young children who regularly attend pediatric primary care clinics.

DESIGN

Cross-sectional case-control analysis of structured parent interviews conducted in two hospital-based and four community-based pediatric clinics in New England.

SUBJECTS

Parents of 199 healthy 1- to 5-year-old children whose mean age was 30 +/- 15 (SD) months were interviewed. Parents were primarily mothers (94%) with a mean age of 28 +/- 7 (SD) years 60% of whom were single. Educational levels of study parents varied: 43% had not graduated from high school, 29% had a high school equivalency, and 28% had at least a year of college or vocational training. This was a multiethnic parent group. Sixty-five percent were bilingual or non-English speaking. Fifty-eight percent were born outside of the continental United States. Parents were primarily of low-income status with 85% receiving Women, Infant, and Children (WIC) food supplements, Aid to Families With Dependent Children, and/or Medicaid.

RESULTS

Half of the parents interviewed reported that they rarely read books. Sixty percent of children had fewer than 10 books at home and two-thirds of these households contained fewer than 50 books total. When asked open-ended questions, 28% of parents said that sharing books with their child was one of their three favorite activities together, 14% said that looking at books was one of their child's three favorite things to do, and 19% reported sharing books at bedtime at least six times each week. Thirty-nine percent of families had at least one of these three literacy-related responses present and so were said to have a CCLO. A backwards stepwise multiple logistic regression on CCLO was performed with family financial, human, and social capital variables. Parents married or living together (odds ratio [OR] 2.56, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.21-5.42), higher adult-to-child ratios in the home (OR 1.92, 95% CI = 1.20-3.05), households speaking only English (OR 2.67, 95% CI = 1.24-5.76), parents reading books themselves at least a few times a week (OR 2.86, 95% CI = 1.38-5.91), and homes with more than 10 children's books (OR 3.3, 95% CI = 1.6-6.83), were all independently and significantly associated with the presence of CCLO. Older child age and higher parent education remain in the model but were not significant at the P <.05 level. Ethnicity and income status were dropped for lack of additional significance from this model, which described 24% of the variance in CCLO.

CONCLUSION

Although two-parent families and higher adult-to-child ratios in the home appear to be social capital variables with protective effects, low-income, single-parent, and minority or immigrant families are at significant risk for lacking both children's books and a CCLO. We suggest that CCLO may itself be another form of social capital reflecting parental goals and expectations for their children. We speculate that interventions which provide children's books and information about reading with children to impoverished families with young children may facilitate more parent-child book sharing. Pediatricians and other primary care providers serving underserved populations may have a unique opportunity to encourage activities focusing on young children and promoting literacy.

摘要

目的

描述家庭读写环境,并确定与定期前往儿科初级保健诊所就诊的幼儿家庭中是否存在以儿童为中心的读写倾向(CCLO)相关的经济、人力和社会资本变量。

设计

对在新英格兰地区两家医院和四家社区儿科诊所进行的结构化家长访谈进行横断面病例对照分析。

研究对象

对199名健康的1至5岁儿童的家长进行了访谈,这些儿童的平均年龄为30±15(标准差)个月。家长主要为母亲(94%),平均年龄为28±7(标准差)岁,其中60%为单身。家长的教育水平各不相同:43%未高中毕业,29%具有高中同等学历,28%至少接受过一年的大学或职业培训。这是一个多民族家长群体。65%的家长是双语或非英语使用者。58%出生在美国本土以外。家长主要为低收入状态,85%接受妇女、婴儿和儿童(WIC)食品补助、抚养儿童家庭援助和/或医疗补助。

结果

接受访谈的家长中有一半表示他们很少读书。60%的儿童家中藏书不到10本,其中三分之二的家庭藏书总数不到50本。当被问及开放式问题时,28%的家长表示与孩子一起读书是他们最喜欢的三项共同活动之一,14%表示看书是孩子最喜欢的三件事之一,19%报告每周至少在睡前一起读书六次。39%的家庭至少有这三种与读写相关的表现之一,因此被认为具有CCLO。对CCLO进行了向后逐步多元逻辑回归分析,纳入了家庭经济、人力和社会资本变量。已婚或同居的家长(优势比[OR]2.56,95%置信区间[CI]=1.21 - 5.42)、家中成人与儿童比例较高(OR 1.92,95% CI = 1.20 - 3.05)、只说英语的家庭(OR 2.67,95% CI = 1.24 - 5.76)、家长自己每周至少读几次书(OR 2.86,95% CI = 1.38 - 5.91)以及家中有超过10本儿童书籍的家庭(OR 3.3,95% CI = 1.6 - 6.83),均与CCLO的存在独立且显著相关。年龄较大的儿童和家长较高的教育水平仍在模型中,但在P <.05水平上不显著。由于缺乏额外的显著性,种族和收入状态从该模型中剔除,该模型解释了CCLO中24%的方差。

结论

虽然双亲家庭和家中较高的成人与儿童比例似乎是具有保护作用的社会资本变量,但低收入、单亲以及少数族裔或移民家庭在缺乏儿童书籍和CCLO方面面临显著风险。我们认为CCLO本身可能是反映家长对孩子目标和期望的另一种社会资本形式。我们推测,为有幼儿的贫困家庭提供儿童书籍以及关于与孩子一起阅读的信息的干预措施,可能会促进更多的亲子读书分享。为服务不足人群提供服务的儿科医生和其他初级保健提供者可能有独特的机会鼓励关注幼儿并促进读写能力的活动。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验