Taiwanese mothers' beliefs about reading aloud with preschoolers: findings from the parent reading belief inventory

In this study we adapted DeBaryshe and Binder's Parent Reading Belief Inventory (PRBI) with middle-class, well-educated (M = 14-15 years of education) Taiwanese mothers to find what their beliefs were about reading aloud to young children. Parental reports of home literacy practices including c...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inEarly child development and care Vol. 180; no. 5; pp. 647 - 669
Main Authors Wu, Chu-Chu, Honig, Alice Sterling
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Routledge 01.06.2010
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:In this study we adapted DeBaryshe and Binder's Parent Reading Belief Inventory (PRBI) with middle-class, well-educated (M = 14-15 years of education) Taiwanese mothers to find what their beliefs were about reading aloud to young children. Parental reports of home literacy practices including children's emergent literacy behaviours were also surveyed. Seven hundred and thirty-one mothers and their three- to five-year-old preschoolers (389 boys and 242 girls; M = 54.7 months) were recruited from both public (279) and private (452) licensed pre-kindergarten programmes located in the six districts of Tainan city in Taiwan. Factor analysis resulted in the retention of 24 items from the original PRBI scales; these organised into five subscales (Knowledge, Verbal Participation, Positive Affect, Teaching Efficacy and Reading Instruction) with adequate alpha coefficients ranging from .63 to .90. The key concepts featuring parent reading belief from both cultures were quite similar. Taiwanese mothers did place more value on moral and practical knowledge that children would gain from the storybook reading, whereas American parents viewed positive emotions during joint book reading as more important than the other factors. Taiwanese maternal reading belief inventory scores significantly correlated with family income and maternal education (r = .18 and r = .10, respectively; p < .00) as well as with parent and child literacy-related behaviours (r = .41 and r = .40, respectively; p < .00). Neither child age nor gender was associated with maternal reading belief scores (p >.05). Maternal education was associated with home literacy resources and child literacy behaviours (p < .05).
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0300-4430
1476-8275
DOI:10.1080/03004430802221449