Abstract:
Considerable research has focused on the success of early intervention programs for
children. However, minimal research has focused on the effect these programs have on
the parents of targeted children. Many current early intervention programs champion
family-focused and inclusive programming, but few have evaluated parent participation
in early interventions and fewer still have evaluated the impact of these programs on
beliefs and attitudes and parenting practices. Since parents will continue to play a key
role in their child's developmental course long after early intervention programs end, it is
vital to examine whether these programs empower parents to take action to make changes
in the lives of their children.
The goal of this study was to understand parental influences on the early development
of literacy, and in particular how parental attitudes, beliefs and self efficacy impact parent
and child engagement in early literacy intervention activities.
A mixed method procedure using quantitative and qualitative strategies was
employed. A quasi-experimental research design was used. The research sample, sixty
parents who were part of naturally occurring community interventions in at- risk
neighbourhoods in a south-western Ontario city participated in the quantitative phase.
Largely individuals whose home language was other than English, these participants were
divided amongst three early literacy intervention groups, a Prescriptive Interventionist
type group, a Participatory Empowering type group and a drop-in parent- child
neighbourhood Control group.
Measures completed pre and post a six session literacy intervention, on all three literacy and evidence of change in parental empowerment. Parents in all three groups, on
average, held beliefs about early literacy that were positive and that were compatible with
current approaches to language development and emergent literacy. No significant
change in early literacy beliefs and attitudes for pre to post intervention was found.
Similarly, there was no significant difference between groups on empowerment scores,
but there was a significant change post intervention in one group's empowerment score.
There was a drop in the empowerment score for the Prescriptive Interventionist type
group, suggesting a drop in empowerment level.
The qualitative aspect of this study involved six in-depth interviews completed with a
sub-set of the sixty research participants. Four similar themes emerged across the groups:
learning takes place across time and place; participation is key; success is achieved by
taking small steps; and learning occurs in multiple ways.
The research findings have important implications for practitioners and policy makers
who target at risk populations with early intervention programming and wish to sustain
parental empowerment. Study results show the value parents place on early learning and
point to the importance of including parents in the development and delivery of early
intervention programs.
groups, were analyzed for evidence of change in parental attitudes and beliefs about early literacy and evidence of change in parental empowerment. Parents in all three groups, on
average, held beliefs about early literacy that were positive and that were compatible with
current approaches to language development and emergent literacy. No significant
change in early literacy beliefs and attitudes for pre to post intervention was found.
Similarly, there was no significant difference between groups on empowerment scores,
but there was a significant change post intervention in one group's empowerment score.
There was a drop in the empowerment score for the Prescriptive Interventionist type
group, suggesting a drop in empowerment level.
The qualitative aspect of this study involved six in-depth interviews completed with a
sub-set of the sixty research participants. Four similar themes emerged across the groups:
learning takes place across time and place; participation is key; success is achieved by
taking small steps; and learning occurs in multiple ways.
The research findings have important implications for practitioners and policy makers
who target at risk populations with early intervention programming and wish to sustain
parental empowerment. Study results show the value parents place on early learning and
point to the importance of including parents in the development and delivery of early
intervention programs.