Home environment, pre-schooling and children’s literacy in sub-Saharan Africa francophone

Q2 Social Sciences African Evaluation Journal Pub Date : 2022-11-22 DOI:10.4102/aej.v10i1.650
A. S. Loye, M. S. Jansen van Rensburg, E. Ouedraogo
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Abstract

Background: The sustainable development goal (SDG) 4.2 calls to ‘ensure that all girls and boys have access to quality early childhood development, care and preprimary education so that they are ready for primary education’. It is then important to identify early childhood literacy drivers for better decision-making in education.Objectives: This research investigates the impact of pre-schooling and home environment effect on children’s literacy in sub-Saharan Africa francophone countries.Method: A total of 21 933 Grade 2 children participated in the regional assessment of literacy in 14 countries. Items on cognitive skills were used to assess children’s literacy skill. A contextual questionnaire was used to collect data on the home environment and children’s characteristics. Descriptive statistics, logistic regression and inverse-probability-weighted regression adjustment were used to estimate the impact of pre-schooling and home environment on children’s literacy skill.Results: At least 57% of children in Grade 2 did not have the literacy skill required to pursue their learning without difficulty. Only 28% of children attended preschool. Home-language and reading at home have the highest effect size on children’s literacy skill. Attending preschool improves the percentage of children capable to pursue their learning without difficulty by 10%. Furthermore, that improvement is 15.7% for children who attended preschool. Impact of pre-schooling varies between countries and slightly across gender.Conclusion: Findings of this research call for better access to pre-schooling and better home environment to improve children’s literacy skill. The research will contribute to efforts of the sub-Saharan Africa francophone countries to achieve the SDG 4.2.Contribution: This research contributed to fill the knowledge gaps on Early Childhood literacy in the Global South. It highlighted home environment drivers and the impact of preschooling on children’s literacy skills in the Global South.
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撒哈拉以南非洲法语国家的家庭环境、学前教育和儿童识字率
背景:可持续发展目标4.2呼吁“确保所有女童和男童都能获得高质量的幼儿发展、照料和学前教育,为接受初等教育做好准备”。因此,重要的是确定儿童早期扫盲的驱动因素,以促进更好的教育决策。目的:本研究探讨撒哈拉以南非洲法语国家学前教育和家庭环境对儿童读写能力的影响。方法:对14个国家的21 933名二年级儿童进行识字区域评估。认知技能项目被用来评估儿童的读写能力。使用上下文调查问卷收集有关家庭环境和儿童特征的数据。采用描述性统计、logistic回归和反概率加权回归调整等方法,评估学前教育和家庭环境对儿童读写能力的影响。结果:至少57%的二年级儿童不具备无障碍学习所需的读写技能。只有28%的孩子上过学前班。家庭语言和家庭阅读对儿童读写能力的影响最大。参加学前教育使能够毫无困难地学习的儿童比例提高了10%。此外,上过学前班的儿童的这一比例提高了15.7%。学前教育的影响因国家而异,性别差异也不大。结论:本研究结果呼吁改善学前教育和良好的家庭环境,以提高儿童的读写能力。这项研究将有助于撒哈拉以南非洲法语国家实现可持续发展目标4.2。贡献:本研究有助于填补全球南方国家关于幼儿扫盲的知识空白。报告强调了家庭环境的驱动因素以及学前教育对全球南方国家儿童识字技能的影响。
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来源期刊
African Evaluation Journal
African Evaluation Journal Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal publishes high quality peer-reviewed articles merit on any subject related to evaluation, and provide targeted information of professional interest to members of AfrEA and its national associations. Aims of the African Evaluation Journal (AEJ): -AEJ aims to be a high-quality, peer-reviewed journal that builds evaluation-related knowledge and practice in support of effective developmental policies on the African continent. -AEJ aims to provide a communication platform for scholars and practitioners of evaluation to share and debate ideas about evaluation theory and practice in Africa. -AEJ aims to promote cross-fertilisation of ideas and methodologies between countries and between evaluation scholars and practitioners in the developed and developing world. -AEJ aims to promote evaluation scholarship and authorship, and a culture of peer-review in the African evaluation community.
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