Reading between the lines : contributing factors that affect grade 5 student reading performance as measured across South Africa's 11 languages

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Authors

Van Staden, Surette
Howie, Sarah J.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Routledge

Abstract

This paper reports on the South African results of a study to identify and explain relationships between some major factors associated with successful reading at Grade 5. With 11 official languages, educational policy in South Africa advocates an additive bilingualism model and students in Grade 1 to 3 are taught in their mother tongue. Thereafter, the language of learning and teaching changes to a second language, which in most cases is English. With this complexity of issues, Hierarchical Linear Modeling (HLM) was used to determine the effect of a number of explanatory variables at student- and school level on reading achievement as outcome variable, while controlling for language using the South African PIRLS 2006 data. Utilizing Creemers’ Comprehensive Model of Educational Effectiveness (Creemers and Reezigt, 1999) as theoretical point of departure, this paper will focus on the results of an overall South African model with student- and school level variables.

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Keywords

Educational policies, Reading literacy, PIRLS 2006

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Van Staden, S & Howie, S 2012, 'Reading between the lines : contributing factors that affect grade 5 student reading performance as measured across South Africa's 11 languages', Educational Research & Evaluation, vol. 18, no.1, pp. 85-98.