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Educational Psychology
An International Journal of Experimental Educational Psychology
Volume 36, 2016 - Issue 5
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Articles

Task persistence mediates the effect of children’s literacy skills on mothers’ academic help

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Pages 975-991 | Received 31 May 2014, Accepted 24 Apr 2015, Published online: 27 May 2015
 

Abstract

This longitudinal study aimed at examining the relationship between children's task persistence, mothers' academic help, and the development of children’s literacy skills (reading and spelling) at the beginning of primary school. The participants were 870 children, 682 mothers, and 53 class teachers. Data were collected three times – at the beginning and the end of Grade 1 and at the end of Grade 2. Better literacy skills predicted higher persistence in completing school tasks and, correspondingly, higher persistence was related to better subsequent skills. Also, lower task persistence at the end of Grade 1 corresponded to more frequent academic help from mothers in Grade 2. Moreover, children’s literacy skills predicted mother’s later academic help via task persistence: the lower the children’s literacy skills were, the less task persistence children exhibited, and the more mothers engaged in academic help later on.

Acknowledgments

This study was supported by institutional research funding IUT (3-3) of the Estonian Ministry of Education and Research.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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