The online platform for Taylor & Francis Group content
Advanced Search

Early Education & Development

Volume 21, Issue 3, 2010

Special Issue: Narratives as Learning Tools to Promote School Readiness

Teachers' Interactions During Storybook Reading: A Rural African Perspective

Teachers' Interactions During Storybook Reading: A Rural African Perspective

DOI:
10.1080/10409281003668052
Sonja Highama, Kerstin Monika Tönsinga & Erna Alanta

pages 392-411

Available online: 03 Jun 2010

Abstract

Research Findings: Teaching thinking skills is an important goal of formal primary and secondary education. Storybook reading is a well-established routine in the first few school years. Thinking skills can easily be fostered during these potentially language-rich interactions, making storybook reading a powerful tool for preparing young children for formal schooling. The aim of this research pilot project was to describe how 5 rural South African Grade R teachers interacted with their class during storybook reading. Teachers were videotaped during 3 consecutive story-reading sessions. Their utterances were transcribed and coded according to type and according to the cognitive level at which they fell. Results indicated that teachers used mainly utterances falling at a cognitively lower level and that they favored the use of requesting in their interactions. Although teachers used an interactive reading style and engaged children, their use of storybook reading as a strategy to foster higher level thinking was limited. Practice or Policy: These results are interpreted against a background of African cultural norms for adult–child interactions, taking into account that culture is ever changing. Implications for teacher training and further research are given.

 

Details

  • Available online: 03 Jun 2010

Author affiliations

  • a Centre for Augmentative and Alternative Communication, University of Pretoria

Journal news

  • Early Education & Development is now indexed in ISI!

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group