by Charles Anzalone
A University at Buffalo education professor has sided with the environment in the timeless "nurture vs. nature" debate after his research found that a child's ability to read depends mostly on where that child is born, rather than on his or her individual qualities.
"Individual characteristics explain only 9 percent of the differences in children who can read versus those who cannot," says Ming Ming Chiu, lead author of an international study that explains this connection and a professor in the Department of Learning and Instruction in UB's Graduate School of Education.
"In contrast, country differences account for 61 percent and school differences account for 30 percent," Chiu says.
Therefore, he concludes, the country in which a child is born largely determines whether he or she will have at least basic reading skills. It's clearly a case where "nurture"—the environment and surroundings of the child—is more important than "nature"—the child's inherited, individual qualities, according to Chiu.
More than 99 percent of fourth-graders in the Netherlands can read, but only 19 percent of fourth-graders in South Africa can read, Chiu notes.
"Although the richest countries typically have high literacy rates exceeding 97 percent," he says, "some rich countries, such as Qatar and Kuwait, have low literacy rates—33 percent and 28 percent, respectively."
The study, "Ecological, Psychological and Cognitive Components of Reading Difficulties: Testing the Component Model of Reading in Fourth-graders Across 38 Countries," analyzed reading test scores of 186,725 fourth-graders from 38 countries, including more than 4,000 children from the U.S. Chiu and co-authors Catherine McBride-Chang of the Chinese University of Hong Kong and Dan Lin of the Hong Kong Institute of Education published the study in the winter 2013 issue of the Journal of Learning Disabilities.
The educators used data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's Program for International Student Assessment.
Besides showing that the country of origin was a better predictor of reading skills than individual traits, the study also showed that other attributes at the child, school and country levels were all related to reading.
First, girls were more likely than boys to have basic reading skills, Chiu says. Children with greater early-literacy skills, better attitudes about reading or greater self-confidence in their reading ability also were more likely to have strong basic reading skills.
"Children were more likely to have basic reading skills if they were from privileged families, as measured through socioeconomic status, number of books at home and parent attitudes about reading," says Chiu. "Also, children attending schools with better school climate and more resources were more likely to have basic reading skills.
"Our U.S. culture values 'can-do' individualism, but we forget how much depends on being lucky enough to be born in the right place," he says.
Explore further: US report card: Scores up, but not all good news
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
US report card: Scores up, but not all good news
Nov 07, 2013
Today's fourth and eighth graders are doing better than their predecessors in math and reading. But it's too early to start celebrating.
British children's on-screen reading overtakes books
May 16, 2013
For the first time, British children are reading more on computers and other electronic devices than they are reading books, magazines, newspapers and comics, according to a study of nearly 35,000 youngsters ...
Poor motor performance linked to poor academic skills in the first school years
Oct 28, 2013
Children with poor motor performance at the school entry were found to have poorer reading and arithmetic skills than their better performing peers during the first three years of school. However, no relationship was found ...
Study: Simple teaching tool boosts student reading performance
Aug 29, 2011
Research from North Carolina State University shows that utilizing a freely available literacy tool results in significant advances in fundamental reading skills for elementary school students, without requiring ...
First global study confirms widely held practices on science, math, and reading education
Sep 30, 2013
It's a long held belief that parental and administrative support helps breed academic success; now there's data to back that up. A new study released today by the IEA and the TIMSS and PIRLS International Study Center at ...
Recommended for you
Putting it off: Why we procrastinate
30 minutes ago
Everyone procrastinates. I became somewhat distracted by completely irrelevant websites, for instance, while preparing to write this article.
Cognitive scientists ID new mechanism at heart of early childhood learning and social behavior
15 hours ago
Shifting the emphasis from gaze to hand, a study by Indiana University cognitive scientists provides compelling evidence for a new and possibly dominant way for social partners—in this case, 1-year-olds ...
Wireless sensors used to study meditation's effect on heart health
18 hours ago
Demystifying meditation with science, researchers at the Scripps Translational Science Institute (STSI) have teamed with The Chopra Foundation and The Chopra Center for Wellbeing in a novel study of the ancient ...
Back to the future: Nostalgia increases optimism
21 hours ago
New research from the University of Southampton shows that feeling nostalgic about the past will increase optimism about the future.
Study finds context is key in helping us to recognize a face
Nov 13, 2013
Why does it take longer to recognise a familiar face when seen in an unfamiliar setting, like seeing a work colleague when on holiday? A new study published today in Nature Communications has found that part of the reason ...
Bullies more likely to engage in risky sex, study finds
Nov 13, 2013
(HealthDay)—Teenage bullies are prone to engage in risky sexual behavior, a new study finds.
User comments
© Medical Xpress 2011-2013, Phys.org network
by Charles Anzalone
A University at Buffalo education professor has sided with the environment in the timeless "nurture vs. nature" debate after his research found that a child's ability to read depends mostly on where that child is born, rather than on his or her individual qualities.
"Individual characteristics explain only 9 percent of the differences in children who can read versus those who cannot," says Ming Ming Chiu, lead author of an international study that explains this connection and a professor in the Department of Learning and Instruction in UB's Graduate School of Education.
"In contrast, country differences account for 61 percent and school differences account for 30 percent," Chiu says.
Therefore, he concludes, the country in which a child is born largely determines whether he or she will have at least basic reading skills. It's clearly a case where "nurture"—the environment and surroundings of the child—is more important than "nature"—the child's inherited, individual qualities, according to Chiu.
More than 99 percent of fourth-graders in the Netherlands can read, but only 19 percent of fourth-graders in South Africa can read, Chiu notes.
"Although the richest countries typically have high literacy rates exceeding 97 percent," he says, "some rich countries, such as Qatar and Kuwait, have low literacy rates—33 percent and 28 percent, respectively."
The study, "Ecological, Psychological and Cognitive Components of Reading Difficulties: Testing the Component Model of Reading in Fourth-graders Across 38 Countries," analyzed reading test scores of 186,725 fourth-graders from 38 countries, including more than 4,000 children from the U.S. Chiu and co-authors Catherine McBride-Chang of the Chinese University of Hong Kong and Dan Lin of the Hong Kong Institute of Education published the study in the winter 2013 issue of the Journal of Learning Disabilities.
The educators used data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's Program for International Student Assessment.
Besides showing that the country of origin was a better predictor of reading skills than individual traits, the study also showed that other attributes at the child, school and country levels were all related to reading.
First, girls were more likely than boys to have basic reading skills, Chiu says. Children with greater early-literacy skills, better attitudes about reading or greater self-confidence in their reading ability also were more likely to have strong basic reading skills.
"Children were more likely to have basic reading skills if they were from privileged families, as measured through socioeconomic status, number of books at home and parent attitudes about reading," says Chiu. "Also, children attending schools with better school climate and more resources were more likely to have basic reading skills.
"Our U.S. culture values 'can-do' individualism, but we forget how much depends on being lucky enough to be born in the right place," he says.
Explore further: US report card: Scores up, but not all good news
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
US report card: Scores up, but not all good news
Nov 07, 2013
Today's fourth and eighth graders are doing better than their predecessors in math and reading. But it's too early to start celebrating.
British children's on-screen reading overtakes books
May 16, 2013
For the first time, British children are reading more on computers and other electronic devices than they are reading books, magazines, newspapers and comics, according to a study of nearly 35,000 youngsters ...
Poor motor performance linked to poor academic skills in the first school years
Oct 28, 2013
Children with poor motor performance at the school entry were found to have poorer reading and arithmetic skills than their better performing peers during the first three years of school. However, no relationship was found ...
Study: Simple teaching tool boosts student reading performance
Aug 29, 2011
Research from North Carolina State University shows that utilizing a freely available literacy tool results in significant advances in fundamental reading skills for elementary school students, without requiring ...
First global study confirms widely held practices on science, math, and reading education
Sep 30, 2013
It's a long held belief that parental and administrative support helps breed academic success; now there's data to back that up. A new study released today by the IEA and the TIMSS and PIRLS International Study Center at ...
Recommended for you
Putting it off: Why we procrastinate
30 minutes ago
Everyone procrastinates. I became somewhat distracted by completely irrelevant websites, for instance, while preparing to write this article.
Cognitive scientists ID new mechanism at heart of early childhood learning and social behavior
15 hours ago
Shifting the emphasis from gaze to hand, a study by Indiana University cognitive scientists provides compelling evidence for a new and possibly dominant way for social partners—in this case, 1-year-olds ...
Wireless sensors used to study meditation's effect on heart health
18 hours ago
Demystifying meditation with science, researchers at the Scripps Translational Science Institute (STSI) have teamed with The Chopra Foundation and The Chopra Center for Wellbeing in a novel study of the ancient ...
Back to the future: Nostalgia increases optimism
21 hours ago
New research from the University of Southampton shows that feeling nostalgic about the past will increase optimism about the future.
Study finds context is key in helping us to recognize a face
Nov 13, 2013
Why does it take longer to recognise a familiar face when seen in an unfamiliar setting, like seeing a work colleague when on holiday? A new study published today in Nature Communications has found that part of the reason ...
Bullies more likely to engage in risky sex, study finds
Nov 13, 2013
(HealthDay)—Teenage bullies are prone to engage in risky sexual behavior, a new study finds.
User comments
© Medical Xpress 2011-2013, Phys.org network

No comments:
Post a Comment