TABLE
OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION.
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY.
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
1.3 PURPOSE OF THE STUDY
1.4 OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
1.5 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
1.6 RESEARCH HYPOTHESES.
1.7 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
1.8 LIMITATION OF STUDY
1.9 OPERATIONAL DEFINITION OF TERMS:
CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW.
2.1 THEORETICAL
FRAMEWORK.
2.2 EMPIRICAL STUDIES
2.3 FAMILY INVOLVEMENT AT SCHOOL
2.4 PARENTAL EDUCATION, SKILLS AND ATTITUDE
2.5 THE IMPACT OF READING TO YOUNG CHILDREN
CHAPTER
THREE
RESEARCH
METHODOLOGY
3.0
INTRODUCTION
3.1 RESEARCH
DESIGN
3.2
POPULATION OF THE STUDY
3.3 SAMPLE AND SAMPLING PROCEDURE
3.4
INSTRUMENTATION.
3.5
PROCEDURE FOR DATA COLLECTION
3.6 VALIDITY OF THE INSTRUMENT
3.7 RELIABILITY OF THE INSTRUMENT
3.8 PROCEDURE
3.9 METHOD
AND PROCEDURE
3.10 Data Analysis
CHAPTER
FOUR
DATA
PRESENTATION AND INTERPRETATION
4.1
DATA PRESENTATION
4.2 HYPOTHESES TESTING
4.3 SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
4.4
Discussion.
CHAPTER
FIVE
CONCLUSION
AND RECOMMENDATIONS
5.1
CONCLUSION
5.2
RECOMMENDATIONS
REFERENCES
APPENDIX
CHAPTER
ONE
INTRODUCTION.
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE
STUDY.
Good communication skills continue to be the
foundations of learning, emotional development and socialising throughout a
young person’s schooling and onward into the workplace. Young people need
effective speech, language and communication skills in order to have a wide
range of life choices. For most young people, communication pattern continues
to develop throughout the school years and into adulthood. They develop the
skills they need to solve problem, build effective relationships, negotiate and
tell jokes. Hence, there is a link between parents’ and children’s
communication patterns.
Several
recent studies found that parents with low literacy levels are less likely to
help their children with reading and writing (Williams, Clemens, Oleinikova,
and Tarvin, 2003; Parsons and Bynner, 2007); _ feel less confident in doing so
(Williams etal.,2003); are less likely to have children who read for pleasure
(Parsons andBynner, 2007); are more likely to have children with lower
cognitive and communicative skills (De Coulon, Meschi and Vignoles, 2008).
these links have been challenged.
The
context provided by parents and their consistent support might be more
important than any transfer of skills [for their children’s literacy
development] (Auerbach, 1989, p.171). Parental education level has an impact on
young children’s communication pattern
Parents’
level of education correlates with the cognitive development of babies between
12 months and 27 months of age (Roberts, Bornstein, Slater and Barrett,
1999).Despite the importance of communication, some parents education has in
one way or the other influenced their children communication pattern.
Parental
education has a significant influence on children's communication pattern well
into adolescence and adulthood. parents
continue to be a vital source of support socially and emotionally as well as
academically. Parents often have different views of young people’s
communication strengths and needs because of their knowledge of them over time,
so maintaining an effective relationship between home and school is important.
However this is often difficult when, typically, contact with school becomes
less as pupils move through primary school.
The
home is crucial. Parents have the greatest influence on the achievement of
young people through supporting their learning in the home rather than
supporting activities in school. Early
intervention is vital. The earlier parents become involved in their children’s
literacy practices, the more profound the results and the longer-lasting the
effects. Children learn long before they enter formal education. Parents are a
child’s first educator. A child’s family and home environment has a strong
influence on his/her communication pattern and educational achievement. This
influence is stronger during the child’s early years but continues throughout their
school years.
Parents
reading to babies and young children has a strong impact on children’s
communication pattern. Parents’ reading to their children in the pre-school
years is regarded as an important predictor of literacy achievement
(Weinberger, 1996). Hence an uneducated parent may not be able to read to their
children. This parental activity is
associated with strong evidence of benefits for children such as communication
growth, reading achievement and writing (Bus, Van Ijzendoorn and Pellegrini,
1995; Brooks, 2000), the enhancement of children's language comprehension and
expressive language skills, listening and speaking skills, later enjoyment of
books and reading, understanding narrative and story (Wells, 1987;
Crain-Thoreson and Dale, 1992; Weinberger, 1996),
Parental involvement in their child’s reading
has been found to be the most important determinant of language and emergent
literacy (Bus, Van Ijzendoorn and Pellegrini, 1995). Children who are read to
at an early age tend to display greater interest in reading at a later age
(Arnold and Whitehurst, 1994). Story
reading at home enhances children's language comprehension and expressive
language skills (Crain-Thoreson and Dale, 1992). Oral language developed from
parent/child reading predicts later writing development (Crain-Thoreson,
Bloomfield, Anthony, Bacon, Phillips and Samwel,
1999).
Parents
who introduce their babies to books give them a head start in school and an
advantage over their peers throughout primary school (Wade and Moore, 2000).
Many
background variables affect the impact of the family and home environment (such
as socio-economic status, , family size, etc.) but parental attitudes and
behaviour, especially parental education in home learning activities, can be
crucial to children’s achievement and can overcome the influences of other
factors. Put succinctly in a question form, the problem of this study is: what
is the influence of parents education on
communication pattern of primary school student in Lagos metropolis
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE
PROBLEM
Primary school
students life is no doubt a time for speech and language development, hence,
communication pattern should be of paramount interest to both parents of the
children and their teacher. In many circumstances now, the primary school
students in Nigeria fail to understand the need for good communication pattern
and parents and has failed also to sensitize the primary school children on the
need for proper communication pattern.
Schools also has
failed to integrate communication pattern as part of curriculum of primary
schools in Nigeria. Hence ignoring the need and the roles good communication
pattern to a child even through his/her career in adulthood.
1.3 PURPOSE OF THE
STUDY
The
general purpose of the study is to investigate the influence of parent
education on communication patterns of
public primary school students of Lagos
metropolis.
1.4 OBJECTIVE OF THE
STUDY
Specifically,
the study sought to:
1.
Determine the influence of parental
education on their childrens' communication pattern
2.
Ascertain the difference in
communication patterns between children that are read to by parents and their peers that are not read to.
3.
Determine the influence of
parent-child communication patterns on the in-school children’ academic
achievement.
1.5 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
In order to
realize the above objectives, the following research questions were raised.
1.
To what extent do parental education
influence children's communication pattern?
2. What is the difference between the
communication patterrn of children that
are read to by parents and their peers that are not?
3.
What is the influence of parent-child
communication patterns on their primary school children’ academic
achievement?
1.6 RESEARCH HYPOTHESES.
1.
There is no significant difference between parents education and children
communication pattern.
2.
There is no significant difference between communication pattern of children
that are read to and their peers that are not.
3.
There is no significant difference between parent-child communication pattern
and their primary school children academic achievement.
1.7 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE
STUDY
The
study has theoretical significance as it lends credence to Albert Bandura’s
social learning theory which sees human relationship as a basic unit of
learning through observation, imitation and modelling. Parents and significant
others in the child’s social life should therefore realise that the child
learns more through observation and modelling. This study helps to endorse the
parents education as it influences children communication pattern.
1.8 LIMITATION OF STUDY
This
study is carried out Kosofe local government in Lagos metropolis, which is
located in South West region of Nigeria in West Africa. The study will be
limited to primary 5 pupils in selected
schools in Kosofe local government.
1.9 OPERATIONAL
DEFINITION OF TERMS:
1.Parents
A person who is a father or mother : a person
who has a child.
2. Education
- The process of receiving or giving
systematic instruction, especially at a school or university.
- An enlightening experience.
3. Parental education
The
process of receiving or giving systematic instruction, especially at a school
or university by parents.
4.Communication
Communication
means transferring messages from one to another and it has several forms such
as intrapersonal, interpersonal, group and mass communication.
it
is also the act or an instance of communicating; the imparting or exchange of
information, ideas, or feelings.
5. Communication
pattern.
Communication patterns. - A set of behaviours
by which people habitually seek to convey meaning to another
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