The effect of classroom environment on literacy development

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
The effect of classroom environment on literacy development
Abstract
The physical characteristics of a child’s learning environment can affect health, wellbeing and educational progress. Here we investigate the effect of classroom setting on academic progress in 7–10-year-old students comparing reading development in “open-plan” (multiple class groups located within one physical space) and “enclosed-plan” (one class group per space) environments. All learning conditions (class group, teaching personnel, etc.) were held constant throughout, while physical environment was alternated term-by-term using a portable, sound-treated dividing wall. One hundred and ninety-six students underwent academic, cognitive and auditory assessment at baseline and 146 of these were available for repeat assessment at the completion of 3 school terms, allowing within-child changes across an academic year to be calculated. Reading fluency development (change in words read-per-minute) was greater for the enclosed-classroom phases (P < 0.001; 95%CI 3.7, 10.0) and the children who showed the greatest condition difference (i.e. slower rate of development in the open-plan) were those with the worst speech perception in noise and/or poorest attention skills. These findings highlight the important role classroom setting plays in the academic development of young students.
Publication
npj Science of Learning
Volume
8
Issue
1
Pages
1-10
Date
2023-04-03
Journal Abbr
npj Sci. Learn.
Language
en
ISSN
2056-7936
Accessed
31/05/2024, 10:09
Library Catalogue
Rights
2023 The Author(s)
Extra
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Rance, G., Dowell, R. C., & Tomlin, D. (2023). The effect of classroom environment on literacy development. Npj Science of Learning, 8(1), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41539-023-00157-y