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    The effectiveness of an online dialogic reading intervention for improving the oral language skills of children attending a DEIS school in Ireland

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    O'Shea, S. J. (2022) The effectiveness of an online dialogic reading intervention for improving the oral language skills of children attending a DEIS school in Ireland.pdf (1.351Mb)
    Date
    2023-10-02
    Author
    O'Shea, Sarah Jane
    Peer Reviewed
    No
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    Abstract
    Background: Dialogic Reading (DR) is a well-established, evidence-based, interactive reading intervention. Research indicates that children from low-socioeconomic backgrounds benefit less well from this intervention than children from high-socioeconomic backgrounds, with contributing factors suggested as parents’ self-efficacy and perceived competency. The current study aimed to address limitations as highlighted in previous research and adequately support this population’s specific needs using online intervention sessions. Methods: A cluster-randomised controlled experiment was used to investigate the effectiveness of an online, six-session, parent-led DR intervention on children’s oral language skills, as assessed by standardised measures of expressive and receptive language. Twenty-two parent-child dyads attending an urban DEIS school were pair-matched cluster randomised into two conditions: intervention and waitlist control. Participating children were aged between 50 and 95 months. Parents were instructed to read at home with their children between intervention sessions, which took place over 8 weeks. Parents’ implementation fidelity was monitored via check-ins during online sessions and phone calls. Results: Results of three separate mixed-model repeated-measures ANOVAs indicate that the intervention was ineffective at significantly improving young children’s oral language skills, compared to waitlist control. Participating parents’ level of participation decreased over the course of 8 weeks. Conclusion: Due to challenges associated with parents’ engagement, it was not possible to definitively conclude whether this online, parent-led DR intervention can significantly impact children’s language skills. Practical implications for implementing a DR intervention with at-risk populations within an Irish context are discussed in terms of the findings. Factors which may contribute to this population’s responsiveness to intervention and directions for future studies are explored.
    Keywords
    Dialogic reading
    Oral language intervention
    Parent-child shared reading
    DEIS school intervention
    Low-socioeconomic status language intervention
    Language (ISO 639-3)
    eng
    URI
    https://dspace.mic.ul.ie/handle/10395/3140
    Collections
    • Special Education (Theses)

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