The International Reading Association
Home |  Contact Us | Help | Site Map

Abstract of

Reading Practices Among Adult Education Participants

 

full text - HTML   full text - PDF

 

This study extends the literature on the relation between reading practices and individual characteristics of participants in adult education who have low literacy skills. Reading practices describe individuals' reading frequency for different types of written material, such as books, newspapers, magazines, technical materials, and work documents. A survey of 213 participants considered individual characteristics such as age, gender, education level, reading level, learning disability status, and employment status. Univariate, bivariate, and multivariate analyses identified differences in reading practices by age, gender, learning disability status, and reading level. Complex interactions among these learner characteristics were also identified. The authors discuss the implications of their findings for educators of adults when matching curricular materials to salient learner characteristics, which could enhance the learners' persistence and success.

Abstract from Mellard, D., Patterson, M., & Prewett, S. (2007, April/May/June). Reading Practices Among Adult Education Participants. Reading Research Quarterly, 42(2), 188–213. doi: 10.1598/RRQ.42.2.1

 

arrowMore About RRQ

arrowArchives

arrowSelected Articles

arrowSubscription/Access Information

design image design image

arrowArticles that
cite this article



arrowEnglish

arrowFrançais

arrowDeutsch

arrowEspañol

arrowРусский


menu arrowJournals

The Reading Teacher

Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy

Reading Research Quarterly

Lectura y Vida

Reading Online

menu arrowBooks, Brochures, Videos

menu arrowReading Today

menu arrowRights and Permissions

menu arrowFor Authors

menu arrowFor Reviewers

menu arrowFor Advertisers