Journal Articles
Hong Kong pre-service early childhood teachers’ attitudes towards parental involvement and the role of their family relationship quality
- Hong Kong pre-service early childhood teachers’ attitudes towards parental involvement and the role of their family relationship quality
- Routledge
- 2019
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Pre-Primary Education
- Post-Secondary Education
- Teachers’ attitudes towards parental involvement play an important role in the ways they approach children’s families. This study examined Hong Kong pre-service early childhood teachers’ attitudes towards different types of parental involvement strategies and investigated whether these attitudes were related to the quality of relationships within their own family. Data were collected from 163 Hong Kong pre-service early childhood teachers via questionnaire. Results showed that engaging families in school decisions was perceived as the least important and feasible. The pre-service teachers also felt least confident in implementing it. There were, however, discrepancies in the perceived levels of importance, feasibility and confidence towards other types of parental involvement strategies. The levels of cohesion and expressiveness in pre-service teachers’ own families were positively related to their attitudes towards some types of parental involvement strategies. These findings suggest that teacher educators should take pre-service teachers’ family experiences into consideration when preparing them to work with children’s families. Copyright © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
-
- English
- Journal Articles
-
- 02607476
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/bibs/dee07151
- 2020-01-06
Recent Journal Articles
Students’ and teachers’ reactions to a novel school-based physical education SELF-FIT intervention A qualitative studyJournal Articles
Examining the criterion validity of two scalable, information technology-based systems designed to measure the quantity and quality of movement behaviours of children from Hong Kong primary schools: A cross-sectional validation studyJournal Articles
Perceived and actual movement skill competence: The association among primary school children in Hong KongJournal Articles
Understanding the teaching and learning of fundamental movement skills in the primary physical education setting: A qualitative studyJournal Articles
Improving fundamental movement skills in Hong Kong students through an assessment for learning intervention that emphasizes fun, mastery, and support: The A + FMS randomized controlled trial study protocolJournal Articles
Association between physical activity and fundamental movement skills in preschool-aged children: Does perceived movement skill competence mediate this relationship?Journal Articles
Preservice physical education teachers' perceived physical literacy and teaching efficacyJournal Articles
The impact of COVID-19 on preschool-aged children’s movement behaviors in Hong Kong: A longitudinal analysis of accelerometer-measured dataJournal Articles

EdLink