Learning through play: improving the reading skills through the joyful phonetics of pre-school children

Objective: This study examined the role of a joyful phonetic method to improve reading skills of pre-school children in Indonesia. Materials and Methods: Forty-seven pre-school children of age 4-5 years are involved in the study. Two criteria were used to select the participants of the study. Criter...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Taufik, Taufik, Suminto, Suwarsi, Ibrahim, Rahimah, Abdullah, Haslinda
Format: Article
Published: Bentham Science Publishers B.V 2019
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/81213/
https://openpsychologyjournal.com/VOLUME/12/PAGE/188/FULLTEXT/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.upm.eprints.81213
record_format eprints
spelling my.upm.eprints.812132023-05-03T07:34:47Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/81213/ Learning through play: improving the reading skills through the joyful phonetics of pre-school children Taufik, Taufik Suminto, Suwarsi Ibrahim, Rahimah Abdullah, Haslinda Objective: This study examined the role of a joyful phonetic method to improve reading skills of pre-school children in Indonesia. Materials and Methods: Forty-seven pre-school children of age 4-5 years are involved in the study. Two criteria were used to select the participants of the study. Criteria included “they could not read” and “had never read”. The Solomon three groups design was used to test the effectiveness of the treatment. There were one intervention group and two control groups. One of the control groups received the treatment and another one did not. Treatment included joyful learning so that participants did not realise that they were actually learning. Results: According to data analysis, (1) joyful phonetic improved the reading skills of the experimental group more than the control group 1 and (2) the joyful phonetic improved the reading skills of the control group 2 more than the control group 1. Moreover, it was found that the phonetic, which had been given in the joyful condition, affects the improvement of the reading skills of pre-school children. Conclusion: The implication of the study is that the pre-school children would be more focused on the learning if the method has been conducted in a playing nature. Furthermore, pre-school children should be taught to read as they tend to begin their schooling. Bentham Science Publishers B.V 2019 Article PeerReviewed Taufik, Taufik and Suminto, Suwarsi and Ibrahim, Rahimah and Abdullah, Haslinda (2019) Learning through play: improving the reading skills through the joyful phonetics of pre-school children. The Open Psychology Journal, 12 (2019). pp. 188-196. ISSN 1874-3501 https://openpsychologyjournal.com/VOLUME/12/PAGE/188/FULLTEXT/ 10.2174/1874350101912010188
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
description Objective: This study examined the role of a joyful phonetic method to improve reading skills of pre-school children in Indonesia. Materials and Methods: Forty-seven pre-school children of age 4-5 years are involved in the study. Two criteria were used to select the participants of the study. Criteria included “they could not read” and “had never read”. The Solomon three groups design was used to test the effectiveness of the treatment. There were one intervention group and two control groups. One of the control groups received the treatment and another one did not. Treatment included joyful learning so that participants did not realise that they were actually learning. Results: According to data analysis, (1) joyful phonetic improved the reading skills of the experimental group more than the control group 1 and (2) the joyful phonetic improved the reading skills of the control group 2 more than the control group 1. Moreover, it was found that the phonetic, which had been given in the joyful condition, affects the improvement of the reading skills of pre-school children. Conclusion: The implication of the study is that the pre-school children would be more focused on the learning if the method has been conducted in a playing nature. Furthermore, pre-school children should be taught to read as they tend to begin their schooling.
format Article
author Taufik, Taufik
Suminto, Suwarsi
Ibrahim, Rahimah
Abdullah, Haslinda
spellingShingle Taufik, Taufik
Suminto, Suwarsi
Ibrahim, Rahimah
Abdullah, Haslinda
Learning through play: improving the reading skills through the joyful phonetics of pre-school children
author_facet Taufik, Taufik
Suminto, Suwarsi
Ibrahim, Rahimah
Abdullah, Haslinda
author_sort Taufik, Taufik
title Learning through play: improving the reading skills through the joyful phonetics of pre-school children
title_short Learning through play: improving the reading skills through the joyful phonetics of pre-school children
title_full Learning through play: improving the reading skills through the joyful phonetics of pre-school children
title_fullStr Learning through play: improving the reading skills through the joyful phonetics of pre-school children
title_full_unstemmed Learning through play: improving the reading skills through the joyful phonetics of pre-school children
title_sort learning through play: improving the reading skills through the joyful phonetics of pre-school children
publisher Bentham Science Publishers B.V
publishDate 2019
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/81213/
https://openpsychologyjournal.com/VOLUME/12/PAGE/188/FULLTEXT/
_version_ 1765298655695208448
score 13.160551