Receptiveness of the Kindytxt universal early literacy texting program by parents from low, medium, and high socioeconomic communities

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Early Childhood Education Journal

Publisher

Springer

School

School of Education

RAS ID

76326

Funders

Ian Potter Foundation (31110220) / Fogarty Foundation / Association of Independent Schools of Western Australia

Comments

Hill, S. M., Barratt-Pugh, C., Johnson, N. F., & Barblett, L. (2024). Receptiveness of the Kindytxt universal early literacy texting program by parents from low, medium, and high socioeconomic communities. Early Childhood Education Journal. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10643-024-01788-5

Abstract

The home literacy environment (HLE) plays an important role in children’s early literacy learning. Texting programs are an increasing feature of family literacy interventions that support parent engagement in their children’s learning. Unlike face-to-face interventions, texting programs can offer sustained parental support at low cost and large scale. Messages can be translated into other languages, saved and shared, thus potentially widening the influence on children’s HLEs. Most early literacy texting programs target families from disadvantaged communities, yet research suggests all families may benefit from guidance on supporting their children’s early literacy. This study examined the receptiveness of a universal early literacy texting program, Kindytxt, by parents of kindergarten children from low, medium and high socioeconomic communities. Kindytxt was developed as a component of a universal book gifting program that uses a library-school model of program delivery and has statewide reach. Parents received 90 texts over 30 weeks and were invited to provide feedback via SMS at several intervals. Non-parametric tests were used to compare parent responses based on community-level socioeconomic status. Similarly high levels of parental support were evident across all socioeconomic strata. We argue that a universal approach can avoid the stigma and potentially lower uptake of programs that target disadvantaged families. Moreover, the Kindytxt cooperative delivery model allows targeted strategies to be incorporated within the universal program. Teachers and librarians can proactively bolster recruitment to the texting program and support parents to differentiate the literacy activities to suit their child’s cultural context and level of literacy development.

DOI

10.1007/s10643-024-01788-5

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