Revista del Centro de Investigación de la Universidad La Salle
Vol. 13, No. 49, enero-junio 2018, pp. 25-42
DOI: https://doi.org/10.26457/recein.v13i49.1706

Analysis of literacy environments within the families at San Agustín, San Luis Potosí, México

Análisis de los ambientes de alfabetización dentro de las familias en San Agustín, San Luis Potosí, México

Mariana Moya González1, Esther Caldiño Mérida2, Maria del Rosario Reyes Martínez3 Martha Angelica Silva Ortega4

1Universidad La Salle México (Mexico)
2Universidad La Salle México (Mexico)
3Universidad La Salle México (Mexico)
4Larsen Middle School District U-46 (USA)

Correspondance author: marimoya_9@hotmail.com

Received: 15 August 2018 | Accepted: 1 November 2018 | Published: 30 November 2018 |

Copyright © 2018 "Mariana Moya González, Esther Caldiño Mérida, Maria del Rosario Reyes Martínez, Martha Angelica Silva Ortega." This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Abstract

Literacy environments creation in Mexico has become an important core in Preschool Education growth; this is one of the biggest concerns of educators and parents, due to the society necessities and demands. As a consequence of this demands, literacy environments have been the root cause of several researches. This literacy process has so far been over all the teachers, as they a have primary responsibility to teach activities, strategies and closer ways to introduce them into the Reading and writing world. There are some parents, who are interested to support their children with activities to promote reading and writing process at home, sometimes they ask for help to teachers, nevertheless they not always are willing to help them either, for this reason parents teach and do the knowledge transfer to their children in the manner in which they were taught. Under the above, emerge the necessity of conduct a study to analyse the context in which the participants (mothers), operate to encourage or create literacy environments at their homes, which are fundamental for competencies and skills development for the future reading and writing process. Discursive Textual Analysis was used as a data analysis technique.

Keywords: Literacy environment, participation of mothers, reading and writing.

Introduction

Reading and writing in our country have been terms that were used constantly throughout the political periods (six years) when we talk about Literacy, and how to end with illiteracy, but has this goal really been achieved? Today, several national surveys (National Survey of reading in Mexico conducted by INEGI1, and National Survey of Reading and Writing, carried out by CONACULTA2) that have been applied in our country, throw some important data: 80.8% of the population has read Some text last year, those who do not read argue that it is due to lack of time (48.5%), and lack of interest (22.4%), likewise there is a total of 38 minutes of continuous reading; The stimuli for the joy for reading are generated in childhood.

If we take up this information, we should focus on the early years of our children, especially what happens within families, in terms of reading and writing, from this context is the first literacy environment that the child has access to, so becomes the ideal context to start the taste for reading and writing. However, as we all know, the fundamental role of the family in the education of their children has been left aside, relegating responsibility only to school.

Considering this information, it is important to take into account that it is a literacy environment, which is the propitious means to generate in our students a joy for reading and writing. This document is a recapitulation of the study carried out during four years, as a result of a Doctoral Thesis in the community of San Agustín, of the municipality of Villa de Arriaga, in the state of San Luis Potosí; where characteristics were analyzed within 18 households, identifying in this way that it facilitates and inhibits both the family context and the social context, the generation of this literacy environment.

1Survey conducted in February 2016 by the National Institute of Geography and Information Statistics to a Mexican population aged 18 and up.

2National Survey conducted in 2015 by the National Council for Culture and the Arts, to a population of 12 years or more living in the Mexican territory.

I. Theoretical Reference

As we mentioned earlier, reading and writing are extremely important skills for our daily lives. Reading is seen as a competence and an instrument of learning; who learns to read efficiently and constantly, develops own thinking. Thus becoming a transcendental learning for schooling and the intellectual growth of the person (UNESCO, 2016, p.16).

To be able to approach to knowledge, we use reading to participate actively in society. The language that the child uses daily has a social and communicative function, where he/she modifies the oral language from the situation in which he/she is (Kucer, 2009), it is important to mention that this is not generated by an explicit teaching but by the participation of the child in real situations of his daily life (Larson and Marsh, 2005).

Writing helps us to satisfy needs in different areas in which we develop, helps us to gather, preserve and transmit all information, is a tool that helps us to express our ideas, to develop creativity, to communicate with other people (UNESCO, 2016).

Reading and writing, seen from literacy, is considered as a social practice, which involves working with reading and writing as linguistic and psychological processes, and as socio-cultural practices. Which must occur in a contextualized cultural and social environment (UNESCO, 2016). Nowadays, Reading and writing of children must be focused so that they can develop in the literate world of the 21st century.

Several authors argue that children acquire knowledge from the context and experiences they have in their home, since as we know the family is the first literacy agent (Strickland and Taylor, 1989, Dahl and Freepon, 1995; Luquero, 2014; Vega and Macotela, 2015). It is important to mention that not all family contexts are equal, and therefore, children have different contact with oral and written language. Since the literacy environments are different in each family. Vega and Macotela, (2015) affirm that:

“A child initiates his literacy long before entering school as the development of this literacy is highly influenced by the quality and quantity of the activities related to the written language that the child makes at home, as well as by the grade in who gets involved in them” (p.19).

Reading habits are based on the quality of the family environment that children have in their childhood. When a child shows greater reading competence, it is because he has parents with a good attitude toward reading, who spend time weekly to this activity (Gil, 2009, Strommen and Mates, 2004). When the first stories read were made in an emotional and cheerful atmosphere, future readers are formed (Salazar, 2006). Most parents have home-related reading materials in their homes, and encourage their children to read during the school year as part of a homework assignment; however, they do not see reading as an activity that can be enjoyed. When parents do not read, or do so out of obligation, children see reading only as a school obligation (Moreno 2001).

If we consider the aforementioned information, we can affirm that nowadays, literacy spaces can not be defined in a single or standardized way since each family, and each context, is different. UNESCO recommends creating favourable environments for reading and writing, considering the local culture. Create a "literate" environment, it is difficult because you must combine the materiality, and artifacts, with the people who will take care of and inhabit, and the rules or interactions that will occur. Dus, it is not only a space (library, home, classroom), it is something that is created and that depends on the interactions of people, together with the materials that are there.

Chhetri and Baker, (2005) argue that creating a literacy environment is creating a social, political and cultural environment that values and nurtures all forms of literacy. "However, a rich literate environment does not occur overnight. It evolves over time and its creation requires commitment and collaboration between different stakeholders or stakeholders "(UNESCO, 2011, p.16)

On the other hand, the literacy environment according to the Center of Excellence for the Training of Teachers of Peru (2004) is:

... the "literacy environment" is one that lets the literate world within reach of the child, that is, it is the context that allows the child to interact in a meaningful way with many types of texts (magazines, journals, books, notes, letters ...) and other auxiliary objects (paper, pencil, envelope, rubber, pencil sharpener, bookmark ...) Furthermore, it is maintained that in the setting of a literacy environment, the child has the opportunity to observe adults using natural reading and writing to achieve a specific purpose, thus receiving the stimulus and the necessary model to interact freely and productively with the written language (p.3).

A child who reads, converses at an early age, has contact with books and literacy experiences, acquires a joy for reading; The acquisition of reading skills begins in childhood and continues throughout the life of the child according to Roberts, Jurgens and Burchinal, (2005) if a child is a good reader in school, it will continue to be as it grows. On the other hand, if a child struggles with reading, he will have problems for the rest of his school years. Trelease (2001) states that "knowledge of almost all subjects in the school flows from reading" and "reading is the most important social factor in life today" (p.24). When a student has difficulties with reading, tends to be less social, to participate to a lesser degree in extracurricular activities, or not to finish their education (Hall and Moats, 1999).

If we want to stimulate the interest of the child and develop reading and writing skills in them, it is essential to have a literacy environment in the home. According to Hill-Clark (2005), there are many facets of a literacy environment at home, in which parents and / or caregivers must perform certain actions such as:

II. Methodology

A qualitative methodology was used, with two types of approaches; the first one that was used was the exploratory approach, in which the reality of the context was documented, in order to analyze and plan how the rest of the research would be carried out. In this approach, questionnaires were conducted with the participants, and from the information that was retrieved, the Interview Guide was planned, which would be used later. In addition, an observation guide was used, as well as photographic records, in order to reconstruct and contextualize the reality of the participants. With this information a greater familiarization and approximation with the reality that was intended to analyze was achieved.

For the analysis of the information the Discursive Textual Analysis DTA was used, Moraes and Galliazzi (2007) maintain that: "... the textual analysis of the discourse can be understood as an organized process of the construction of new meanings for certain objects, of textual materials related to these phenomena "(p 45).

The DTA is a process where new knowledge is generated which is generated by making a triangulation of information that is retrieved from the research participants, this process consists of three stages (Dismantling the texts, establishing relationships and obtaining the new one). Moraes and Galliazzi (2006) mention that it is a data analysis approach, based on two types of analysis in qualitative research, which are: content analysis and discourse analysis. They also mention that it is a process in which texts are divided into units, which can generate other types of groupings; It is an open process.

Moraes (2003) as well as Viola and Dalto (2012) tell us about a series of phases or moments that have to be followed: the first phase is "Dismantling of texts", it is characterized by a careful and exhaustive reading of the data, which will be trimmed, of built, according to the interpretative capacities of the researcher, this phase is divided at the same time in other moments, the first one is the Reading and signification (where there is a multiplicity of reading, based on the theoretical perspective); the second step is the deconstruction of the texts and the unitarization, where the texts are dismantled to achieve units of analysis of greater or lesser extent; the third is Involvement and impregnation, where the information of the analyzed texts is intensely involved; the second phase is "establishment of relationships", a process that consists of comparing the units defined in the initial process of the analysis, to take them to groups of similar elements; to finally "obtain a new emergent" where analytical metatext are constructed that consist of the description and interpretation.

According to Moraes and Galliazzi, (2007), categories can be generated from three methods; Deductive, inductive and intuitive. The deductive method is a movement that goes from the general to the particular, that is, it implies the construction of a priori categories, those that arise from the theoretical knowledge that the researcher has, establishing units of analysis in pre-established boxes. This can be presented even before examining the corpus.

In contrast, the inductive process involves the categories of the particular and the general, as well as the units of analysis constructed from the "corpus", these categories are known as emerging. "The emerging categories are the theoretical constructs that the researcher develops from the corpus" (Moraes and Galiazzi, 2007, p.25).

For the present study, four categories were used four categories were used, which in turn were divided into subcategories, emphasizing the facilitators and inhibitors; the categories refer to what happens within families (family context), what happens in the specific context, the relationships between family and school, and finally what is in the home to read and write.

III. Results and Discussion

This work, as mentioned above, was carried out with 18 participants, their ages ranging from 27 to 47 years of age. 63% of the participants have three children, 13% have two children, and those who have four, five, six and seven children have a percentage of 6% each. The children of the participants range from 9 months to 20 years of age. See Fig. 1

Figure 1. Graph of number of children per participant. Own elaboration. Graph of number of children per participant. Own elaboration.

Figure 1. Graph of number of children per participant. Own elaboration.



About Fig. 2.- 73% know how to read and write, only 7% mentioned they do not know. Schooling: 36% have completed primary school, 36% have completed secondary (regular), 21% have completed secondary (open) and 7% have primary truncated.

Figure 2. Graph of schooling of the participants. Own elaboration. Graph of schooling of the participants. Own elaboration.

Figure 2. Graph of schooling of the participants. Own elaboration.


In the participantshomes: 80% have books, within this percentage: 35% are primary books, 32% stories, 21% others (magazines, catalogs, cookbooks, coloring books) and 12% secondary books. Seeing that most had free textbooks were questioned, how many books were in the home that were not of this type: 36% have between 1 and 5 books at home, 36% have between 6 and 10, 14% have between 11 and 15, 7% have between 11 and 15 and 7% have more than 20.

Refering to the texts that can be read at home: 100% have a calendar, dictionaries, personal documents, 78% stories, 71% said they have booklets of stores, 64% said they have newspapers and magazines, 28% said they have letters and recipes, and 0% said to have encyclopedias as can be seen in Fig. 3.

Figure 3. Number of books in the house without counting the free text. Number of books in the house without counting the free text.

Figure 3. Number of books in the house without counting the free text.


As for the materials that are in house for children: 100% has notebook, pencil, rubber, pencil sharpener, colors, 86% has paper at home other than the notebook, as striped sheets, colored, box, 71% has crayons. The results obtained from the analysis of the categories mentioned above are divided into four categories, the first of which emphasizes the family context found in the facilitators that:

From the first category we will return the inhibitors of the family context, the following information was found:

Category two emphasizes the context in which they operate, in the same way the facilitators were retaken, being these:

Regarding the inhibitors of the context, it was found that:

Category three refers to the relationships that exist between the participants and the teachers of the schools, certain facilitators are observed:

It is important to maintain that there are more inhibitors because of the relationships established between teachers and participants:

IV. By way of conclusion

With the information previously described, it can be concluded that in this specific context in which the participants develop, if there is a literacy environment with the limitations that exist, as well as with the effort that each one of them makes, however, as we have seen in the theoretical part (Hill-Clark, 2005) a literacy environment implies several activities that must be carried out by parents, and some are not been done as the theory mentions.

It will be fundamental firstly to train the participants in topics of interest to continue with the reading by them to their children, and try to reduce little by little the inhibitors of the family context that influence this literacy environment of the home. It will be important to carry out an investigation to recover the information that preschool and primary school teachers throw at us, as well as what parents and other family members think, since we have observed that the activities that are carried out are not only by mom, but often by siblings and parents.

All this with the purpose of being able to subsequently design an supervising and guide proposal, to work with all the members of the family. This proposal should have several strategies, if we take up the information that this investigation showed us; first of all it will be fundamental to raise awareness and involve little by little the parents (men), as well as the older siblings, about the importance of certain activities that must be carried out at home, to encourage reading and writing ; later it will be important to train mothers interested in certain subjects of primary education, so that they continue to support their children as the years go by.

It will be essential to work with them in the same way certain strategies aimed at the own reading and writing that they have to favor it and promote it beyond what is already done to date. At the same time these strategies are in place, it will be important to generate or create a library for the community in general, so that all children, young people and adults can access different types of printed texts; that will not only generate a library, but also have part of the interpersonal relationships within it, in order to achieve a good performance of the project.

UNESCO (2011) argues that to generate a literate environment there must be: literacy materials and activities, a physical environment, a socio-cultural environment, political environment, evaluation and relationships. The first two elements will facilitate the establishment of a literacy environment, while the other four will help sustain them. When the materials are authentic and real, the students want to read them and apply what they read in their daily lives (UNESCO, 2008).

References