Early Literacy in Library Storytimes: A Study of Measures of Effectiveness


Autoria(s): Campana, Kathleen; Mills, J. Elizabeth; Capps, Janet L.; Dresang, Eliza T.; Carlyle, Allyson; Metoyer, Cheryl A.; Urban, Ivette Bayo; Feldman, Erika N.; Brouwer, Marin; Burnett, Kathleen; Kotrla, Bowie
Data(s)

18/01/2017

18/01/2017

01/01/2017

Resumo

Across the nation, librarians work with caregivers and children to encourage engagement in their early literacy programs. However, these early literacy programs that libraries provide have been left mostly undocumented by research, especially through quantitative methods. Valuable Initiatives in Early Learning that Work Successfully (VIEWS2) was designed to test new ways to measure the effectiveness of these early literacy programs for young children (birth to kindergarten), leveraging a mixed methods, quasi-experimental design. Using two innovative tools, researchers collected data at 120 public library storytimes in the first year of research, observing approximately 1,440 children ranging from birth to 60 months of age. Analysis of year-one data showed a correlation between the early literacy content of the storytime program and children’s outcomes in terms of early literacy behaviors. These findings demonstrate that young children who attend public library storytimes are responding to the early literacy content in the storytime programs.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/1773/37930

Idioma(s)

en_US

Publicador

The Library Quarterly

Tipo

Article