Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Understanding Reading Development: The Interplay of Fluency, Engagement, and Reading Anxiety in Early Grades
View through CrossRef
BackgroundReading achievement is positively associated with reading engagement; however, reading anxiety may undermine this relationship by reinforcing avoidance behaviors and reducing engagement. This study investigated whether reading anxiety mediates the association between early reading fluency and later reading engagement, and whether child interest or parent importance value for reading moderate this relationship.MethodsThe reading skills of approximately 660 children were assessed in Grades 1 and 2. Reading engagement (i.e., reading frequency and avoidance) was measured in both grades, while reading anxiety, children’s interest in reading, and parental value placed on reading were assessed in Grade 2. Structural equation modeling was used to examine the mediating role of reading anxiety and the moderating effects of child and parental task values.ResultsGrade 1 reading fluency skills predicted Grade 2 fluency, indicating that early reading skills have a direct effect on later reading achievement. Additionally, they predicted Grade 2 reading anxiety, with higher early reading fluency predicting lower anxiety levels. Reading anxiety, in turn, was negatively associated with both Grade 2 reading fluency and reading frequency and it significantly mediated the relationship between Grade 1 fluency and Grade 2 reading frequency. Children’s interest in reading was positively associated with both fluency and frequency, while parental value was associated with frequency only. However, neither child nor parent reading values moderated the associations between anxiety and either fluency or frequency.Conclusions These findings highlight the importance of addressing early reading fluency difficulties and reading anxiety to foster sustained reading engagement and support long-term reading development.
Center for Open Science
Title: Understanding Reading Development: The Interplay of Fluency, Engagement, and Reading Anxiety in Early Grades
Description:
BackgroundReading achievement is positively associated with reading engagement; however, reading anxiety may undermine this relationship by reinforcing avoidance behaviors and reducing engagement.
This study investigated whether reading anxiety mediates the association between early reading fluency and later reading engagement, and whether child interest or parent importance value for reading moderate this relationship.
MethodsThe reading skills of approximately 660 children were assessed in Grades 1 and 2.
Reading engagement (i.
e.
, reading frequency and avoidance) was measured in both grades, while reading anxiety, children’s interest in reading, and parental value placed on reading were assessed in Grade 2.
Structural equation modeling was used to examine the mediating role of reading anxiety and the moderating effects of child and parental task values.
ResultsGrade 1 reading fluency skills predicted Grade 2 fluency, indicating that early reading skills have a direct effect on later reading achievement.
Additionally, they predicted Grade 2 reading anxiety, with higher early reading fluency predicting lower anxiety levels.
Reading anxiety, in turn, was negatively associated with both Grade 2 reading fluency and reading frequency and it significantly mediated the relationship between Grade 1 fluency and Grade 2 reading frequency.
Children’s interest in reading was positively associated with both fluency and frequency, while parental value was associated with frequency only.
However, neither child nor parent reading values moderated the associations between anxiety and either fluency or frequency.
Conclusions These findings highlight the importance of addressing early reading fluency difficulties and reading anxiety to foster sustained reading engagement and support long-term reading development.
Related Results
Development of the Ego and Discomfort Anxiety Inventory: Initial Validity and Reliability
Development of the Ego and Discomfort Anxiety Inventory: Initial Validity and Reliability
This article reports on four studies regarding the development, reliability, and validity of scales to measure two forms of anxiety, ego anxiety and discomfort anxiety. In the firs...
Second language fluency and its underlying cognitive and social determinants
Second language fluency and its underlying cognitive and social determinants
AbstractIn studying second language (L2) fluency attainment, researchers typically address questions about temporal and hesitation phenomena in a descriptive manner, cataloguing wh...
Developing fluency with multi-word expressions
Developing fluency with multi-word expressions
<p>This three-part study was motivated by the need for empirically tested methods for teaching and learning multi-word expressions to develop fluency in language learning cla...
Evaluation of Second Language Dialogue Fluency
Evaluation of Second Language Dialogue Fluency
This paper provides a comprehensive review of the measures of dialogue fluency, with a focus on within-turn fluency and between-turn fluency. First, within-turn fluency includes th...
Cognitive Control Performance as Measured by Clustering and Switching in Nepali – English Bilingual Verbal Fluency Task
Cognitive Control Performance as Measured by Clustering and Switching in Nepali – English Bilingual Verbal Fluency Task
Verbal fluency task is a simple yet powerful neuropsychological tool for measuring linguistic and cognitive processing. In this research article we report the clustering and switch...
An Exploratory Study of Mathematics Anxiety in Caribbean Preservice Teachers
An Exploratory Study of Mathematics Anxiety in Caribbean Preservice Teachers
The Problem Correlational studies suggest that gender, attitudes to mathematics, mathematics performance, the number of college mathematics courses taken, and mathematics teacher ...
Math Anxiety and Financial Anxiety Predicting Individuals’ Financial Management Behavior
Math Anxiety and Financial Anxiety Predicting Individuals’ Financial Management Behavior
Background. In managing finances, people need to process various financial texts containing math (e.g., amount of money and mathematical concepts) and financial information (e.g., ...
Do Reading and Arithmetic Fluency Share the Same Cognitive Base?
Do Reading and Arithmetic Fluency Share the Same Cognitive Base?
We examined the role of different cognitive-linguistic skills in reading and arithmetic fluency, and whether the effects of these skills are mediated by reading and arithmetic accu...

