Parental Perspectives on Their Grade 4 Children with Reading and Writing Difficulties in Mainstream Government Schools in Mauritius

Reading and writing difficulties (RWD) in learners pose significant challenges not just for children but also for parents. While there is limited support available for children with RWD and their parents in Mauritian schools, research may reveal areas of parental need that speech-language therapists...

وصف كامل

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
الحاوية / القاعدة:International Journal of Education
المؤلفون الرئيسيون: Sattiavany Veerabudren, Alta Kritzinger, Marien Graham, Salomé Geertsema, Mia le Roux
التنسيق: مقال
اللغة:الإنجليزية
منشور في: Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia Press 2021-08-01
الموضوعات:
الوصول للمادة أونلاين:https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/ije/article/view/43878
_version_ 1850050882852356096
author Sattiavany Veerabudren
Alta Kritzinger
Marien Graham
Salomé Geertsema
Mia le Roux
author_facet Sattiavany Veerabudren
Alta Kritzinger
Marien Graham
Salomé Geertsema
Mia le Roux
author_sort Sattiavany Veerabudren
collection DOAJ
container_title International Journal of Education
description Reading and writing difficulties (RWD) in learners pose significant challenges not just for children but also for parents. While there is limited support available for children with RWD and their parents in Mauritian schools, research may reveal areas of parental need that speech-language therapists may address. The aim was to determine parents’ perspectives regarding their Grade 4 children with RWD in mainstream government schools in Mauritius. Teachers identified children with RWD with the Screening Tool for Learning Disorder, and parents were requested to participate in the study. Sixty-seven parents completed a questionnaire investigating their perspectives on the symptoms and causes of their child’s RWD and the ways in which they assist their child. The screening tool differentiated between children at risk of specific learning disorder (SLD) and children who indicated clear symptoms of SLD. The results of the tool did not correspond closely with the participants’ satisfaction with their child’s academic performance. The majority of participants could, however, identify RWD in their children when descriptions were given. Parents mostly cited laziness as the main cause of their child’s RWD. The results showed that participants had limited information about the causes and symptoms of RWD and SLD. There is a lack of awareness about the role of speech-language therapists in the intervention of RWD. There are limited resources and support for children with RWD, despite an inclusive education policy in Mauritius. Speech-language therapists and teachers should collaborate to support children with RWD and their parents using inclusive education strategies.
format Article
id doaj-art-3663f37bb2f64e6b816f044ec55d71ff
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 1978-1342
2442-4730
language English
publishDate 2021-08-01
publisher Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia Press
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-3663f37bb2f64e6b816f044ec55d71ff2025-08-20T00:27:01ZengUniversitas Pendidikan Indonesia PressInternational Journal of Education1978-13422442-47302021-08-0114212713710.17509/ije.v14i2.4387818191Parental Perspectives on Their Grade 4 Children with Reading and Writing Difficulties in Mainstream Government Schools in MauritiusSattiavany Veerabudren0Alta Kritzinger1Marien Graham2Salomé Geertsema3Mia le Roux4Department of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, University of PretoriaDepartment of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, University of PretoriaDepartment of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, University of PretoriaDepartment of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, University of PretoriaDepartment of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, University of PretoriaReading and writing difficulties (RWD) in learners pose significant challenges not just for children but also for parents. While there is limited support available for children with RWD and their parents in Mauritian schools, research may reveal areas of parental need that speech-language therapists may address. The aim was to determine parents’ perspectives regarding their Grade 4 children with RWD in mainstream government schools in Mauritius. Teachers identified children with RWD with the Screening Tool for Learning Disorder, and parents were requested to participate in the study. Sixty-seven parents completed a questionnaire investigating their perspectives on the symptoms and causes of their child’s RWD and the ways in which they assist their child. The screening tool differentiated between children at risk of specific learning disorder (SLD) and children who indicated clear symptoms of SLD. The results of the tool did not correspond closely with the participants’ satisfaction with their child’s academic performance. The majority of participants could, however, identify RWD in their children when descriptions were given. Parents mostly cited laziness as the main cause of their child’s RWD. The results showed that participants had limited information about the causes and symptoms of RWD and SLD. There is a lack of awareness about the role of speech-language therapists in the intervention of RWD. There are limited resources and support for children with RWD, despite an inclusive education policy in Mauritius. Speech-language therapists and teachers should collaborate to support children with RWD and their parents using inclusive education strategies.https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/ije/article/view/43878mainstream government schoolsmauritiusparental perspectivesreading and writing difficultiesspecific learning disorderspeech-language therapists
spellingShingle Sattiavany Veerabudren
Alta Kritzinger
Marien Graham
Salomé Geertsema
Mia le Roux
Parental Perspectives on Their Grade 4 Children with Reading and Writing Difficulties in Mainstream Government Schools in Mauritius
mainstream government schools
mauritius
parental perspectives
reading and writing difficulties
specific learning disorder
speech-language therapists
title Parental Perspectives on Their Grade 4 Children with Reading and Writing Difficulties in Mainstream Government Schools in Mauritius
title_full Parental Perspectives on Their Grade 4 Children with Reading and Writing Difficulties in Mainstream Government Schools in Mauritius
title_fullStr Parental Perspectives on Their Grade 4 Children with Reading and Writing Difficulties in Mainstream Government Schools in Mauritius
title_full_unstemmed Parental Perspectives on Their Grade 4 Children with Reading and Writing Difficulties in Mainstream Government Schools in Mauritius
title_short Parental Perspectives on Their Grade 4 Children with Reading and Writing Difficulties in Mainstream Government Schools in Mauritius
title_sort parental perspectives on their grade 4 children with reading and writing difficulties in mainstream government schools in mauritius
topic mainstream government schools
mauritius
parental perspectives
reading and writing difficulties
specific learning disorder
speech-language therapists
url https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/ije/article/view/43878
work_keys_str_mv AT sattiavanyveerabudren parentalperspectivesontheirgrade4childrenwithreadingandwritingdifficultiesinmainstreamgovernmentschoolsinmauritius
AT altakritzinger parentalperspectivesontheirgrade4childrenwithreadingandwritingdifficultiesinmainstreamgovernmentschoolsinmauritius
AT mariengraham parentalperspectivesontheirgrade4childrenwithreadingandwritingdifficultiesinmainstreamgovernmentschoolsinmauritius
AT salomegeertsema parentalperspectivesontheirgrade4childrenwithreadingandwritingdifficultiesinmainstreamgovernmentschoolsinmauritius
AT mialeroux parentalperspectivesontheirgrade4childrenwithreadingandwritingdifficultiesinmainstreamgovernmentschoolsinmauritius