Parental Involvement in Relation to the Literacy and Numeracy Skills of Teenagers
Clicks: 81
ID: 280506
2023
Article Quality & Performance Metrics
Overall Quality
Improving Quality
56.8
/100
Combines engagement data with AI-assessed academic quality
Reader Engagement
Emerging Content
20.4
/100
68 views
24 readers
Trending
AI Quality Assessment
🥈
High Quality
75.4
/100
Academic Rigor
75.0%
Novelty
60.0%
Clarity
85.0%
Key Strengths
- Use of mixed-methods approach
- Addresses a relevant and timely issue
- Clear presentation of findings
Areas for Improvement
- Convenience sampling limits generalizability
- Lack of detail regarding the validated questionnaire used
- Limited discussion of potential confounding variables
AI Recommendations
The discussion section should elaborate on the implications of the non-significant relationships found. Further research should explore the reasons behind the lack of correlation between parental involvement and academic performance in this specific context. Consider addressing the limitations of convenience sampling and its impact on the study's findings.
Enhanced v2.0 Analysis NISO/DORA Compliant
NISO/DORA Compliant
High Impact
📊 Established
Topic Trend
2025 Relevance
Relevance
0%
Importance
0%
Authorship
Unknown
Authors
0
Diversity
0%
Research Integrity
COPE Standards
Integrity
0%
Innovation
0%
Interdisciplinary Value
↔️ Some cross-field connections
55%
Practical Impact Potential
Real-world Applications
75%
Enhanced Evaluation v2.0: Following NISO RP-25-2016, DORA 2025, and COPE assessment standards with 13 quality dimensions.
Abstract
The study examined how much parents support their teenagers in developing numeracy and literacy skills. The researcher used a mixed-methods approach through convenience sampling for the one hundred seniors in high school who took a 48-item literacy and numeracy test and filled out a survey about how involved their parents were. The researchers used a validated questionnaire and utilized the weighted mean, percentage, mean, Spearman Rank Order Correlation, Kruskal-Wallis Test, and Mann-Whitney U Test as the statistical tools. Focus group discussions (FGD) and key informant interviews (KII) also happened. Results say that family participation in terms of emotional support, money, and contact between parents and teachers is "high." However, teenagers could have done better on a 48-question test of reading, writing, and math skills. The data showed no significant relationship between emotional support, financial support, and contact between parents and teachers and how well teenagers did on reading and math tests. Also, parents' involvement stays the same when put into groups based on their profiles. Even with high parental involvement, teenagers from challenging households are more likely to drop out due to financial issues. Parents also need help paying for their children's transportation, income, and projects due to job losses and increasing commodity prices. Low-income teenagers have to choose school or work to eat. To keep their teenagers in school, unemployed mothers had to relocate for work. Meanwhile, parents recommend banning smartphones during class hours to prevent gadget dependence and boost focus.
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| Reference Key |
cariaga2023journalparental
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|---|---|
| Authors | Rujonel F. Cariaga;Rujonel F. Cariaga;bingcar;bingcar;Mary Ann S. Dagunan;Mary Ann S. Dagunan; |
| Journal | Journal of Ongoing Educational Research |
| Year | 2023 |
| DOI |
10.5281/zenodo.8079049
|
| URL | |
| Keywords |
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