0000000000171863

AUTHOR

Elsje Van Bergen

0000-0002-5860-5745

showing 5 related works from this author

Parental Literacy Predicts Children's Literacy: A Longitudinal Family-Risk Study

2011

This family-risk (FR) study examined whether the literacy skills of parents with dyslexia are predictive of the literacy skills of their offspring. We report data from 31 child-parent dyads where both had dyslexia (FR-D) and 68 dyads where the child did not have dyslexia (FR-ND). Findings supported the differences in liability of FR children with and without dyslexia: the parents of the FR-D children had more severe difficulties in pseudoword reading and spelling accuracy, in rapid word recognition, and in text reading fluency than the parents of the FR-ND children. Finally, parental skills were found to be significant predictors of children's Grade 3 reading and spelling. Parental skills p…

Longitudinal studymedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationShort-term memoryExperimental and Cognitive Psychologybehavioral disciplines and activities050105 experimental psychologyLiteracyEducationDevelopmental psychologyFluencyReading (process)mental disordersDevelopmental and Educational Psychologymedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedia_common4. Education05 social sciencesDyslexia050301 educationGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseSpellingnervous system diseasesWord recognitionPsychology0503 educationpsychological phenomena and processesDyslexia
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How Are Practice and Performance Related? Development of Reading From Age 5 to 15

2021

Does reading a lot lead to better reading skills, or does reading a lot follow from high initial reading skills? The authors present a longitudinal study of how much children choose to read and how well they decode and comprehend texts. This is the first study to examine the codevelopment of print exposure with both fluency and comprehension throughout childhood using autocorrelations. Print exposure was operationalized as children’s amount of independent reading for pleasure. Two hundred children were followed from age 5 to age 15. Print exposure was assessed at ages 5, 7, 8, 9, and 13. Prereading skills were tested at age 5 and reading skills at ages 7, 8, 9, 14, and 15 (the latter with t…

Longitudinal studyPath Analysismedia_common.quotation_subjectDecodingeducationsujuvuuslapset (ikäryhmät)asenteetpitkittäistutkimus2-ChildhoodlukeminenEducationPleasureDevelopmental psychologyDevelopmental TheoriesFluencylukuharrastusDevelopmental stage theoriesIndependent readingDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyLearning to read0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedia_commonluetun ymmärtäminenmotivaatio1-Early childhood05 social sciences050301 educationsitoutuminen/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/quality_educationLongitudinal AnalysisComprehensionlastenkirjallisuusReading comprehensionAttitudeslukutaitoChildren’s LiteratureFluencyPsychologyComprehension0503 educationSDG 4 - Quality Education050104 developmental & child psychologyComprehension (General)Emergent LiteracyMotivation/engagement
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Literacy skills seem to fuel literacy enjoyment, rather than vice versa

2023

Children who like to read and write tend to be better at it. This association is typically interpreted as enjoyment impacting engagement in literacy activities, which boosts literacy skills. We fitted direction-of-causation models to partial data of 3690 Finnish twins aged 12. Literacy skills were rated by the twins' teachers and literacy enjoyment by the twins themselves. A bivariate twin model showed substantial genetic influences on literacy skills (70%) and literacy enjoyment (35%). In both skills and enjoyment, shared-environmental influences explained about 20% in each. The best-fitting direction-of-causation model showed that skills impacted enjoyment, while the influence in the othe…

INTRINSIC MOTIVATIONreading abilitycausalityympäristötekijätCognitive NeuroscienceCHILDRENS MOTIVATIONeducationTWINlapset (ikäryhmät)heritabilitybehavioral disciplines and activitieslukeminenkielellinen kehityslukuharrastusDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyACADEMIC-ACHIEVEMENTREADING-ACHIEVEMENTliteracy skillsASSOCIATIONSkaksostutkimusGENDER-DIFFERENCESSELF-DETERMINATION THEORYENGAGEMENT/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/quality_educationhumanities6122 Literature studieslukutaitoSCHOOLkausaliteettigeneettiset tekijätSDG 4 - Quality Educationprint exposureliteracy enjoyment
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Late-Emerging and Resolving Dyslexia

2015

This study focuses on the stability of dyslexia status from Grade 2 to Grade 8 in four groups: (a) no dyslexia in either grade (no-dyslexia, n = 127); (b) no dyslexia in Grade 2 but dyslexia in Grade 8 (late-emerging, n = 18); (c) dyslexia in Grade 2 but not in Grade 8 (resolving, n = 15); and (d) dyslexia in both grades (persistent-dyslexia, n = 22). We examined group differences from age 3.5 to age 14 in (a) reading, vocabulary, phonology, letter knowledge, rapid naming, IQ, verbal memory; (b) familial and environmental risk and supportive factors; and (c) parental skills in reading, phonology, rapid naming, verbal memory, and vocabulary. Our findings showed group differences both in read…

AdultMaleParentsRiskVocabularyAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectbehavioral disciplines and activitiesDevelopmental psychologyDyslexiaChild DevelopmentLate-emerging dyslexiaReading (process)mental disordersDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumansdysleksiaCognitive skillAge of OnsetChildmedia_commonLanguage TestsFamily risk for dyslexiaDyslexiaCognitionPhonologyPrognosis/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/quality_educationmedicine.diseasenervous system diseasesPsychiatry and Mental healthEarly identificationChild PreschoolDisease ProgressionFemaleDisease SusceptibilityReading disabilitiesVerbal memoryAge of onsetPsychologySDG 4 - Quality EducationFollow-Up StudiesJournal of Abnormal Child Psychology
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Parental literacy predicts children’s literacy: A longitudinal family-risk study

2011

This family-risk (FR) study examined whether the literacy skills of parents with dyslexia are predictive of the literacy skills of their offspring. We report data from 31 child–parent dyads where both had dyslexia (FR-D) and 68 dyads where the child did not have dyslexia (FR-ND). Findings supported the differences in liability of FR children with and without dyslexia: the parents of the FR-D children had more severe difficulties in pseudoword reading and spelling accuracy, in rapid word recognition, and in text reading fluency than the parents of the FR-ND children. Finally, parental skills were found to be significant predictors of children's Grade 3 reading and spelling. Parental skills p…

lukivaikeusfamily risk studymental disorderseducationlongitudinal studydysleksiapitkittäistutkimusbehavioral disciplines and activitiespsychological phenomena and processesnervous system diseases
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