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dc.contributor.advisorNel, C.
dc.contributor.advisorVan den Berg, M.
dc.contributor.authorVos, Judith Elizabeth
dc.date.accessioned2014-11-06T08:14:39Z
dc.date.available2014-11-06T08:14:39Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10394/12221
dc.descriptionPhD (Curriculum Development, Innovation and Evaluation), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014en_US
dc.description.abstractReading plays a significant role in society and currently there is worldwide pressure for higher literacy results. The focus of this thesis is reading motivation and how it relates to a learner's amount of reading, reading comprehension and academic achievement since these problematic constructs are attracting the interest of researchers internationally. Researchers have investigated the relationships among these constructs with a variety of results. These relationships, however, have not yet been investigated in a South African context with Afrikaans-speaking adolescent readers, and the only information available on the reading motivation of Afrikaans-speaking adolescent readers is information on their reading preferences in regard to literary texts. Hence the following three research aims were determined for this study: the compilation of a reading motivation profile of Afrikaans-speaking adolescent readers, the analysis of the relationships among Afrikaans-speaking adolescent readers' reading motivation and their amount of reading, reading comprehension and academic achievement in an Afrikaans Home Language environment, as well as the development of a reading motivation framework, particularly for use in the school and classroom environment, for these adolescent readers. The study was carried out in the post-positivistic research paradigm by means of a non-experimental quantitative research approach. Three methods of data collection were used, namely a structured questionnaire (based on the eleven reading motivation dimensions of Wigfield and Guthrie's (1997) Motivation for Reading Questionnaire, which for this purpose had been adapted for the South African context), two reading comprehension tests and obtaining the data regarding the academic achievement of the respondents. The 823 respondents that had participated in this study were the grade 9 learners (Afrikaans Home Language) of seven schools from the Dr Kenneth Kaunda district (North West Province, South Africa), selected by means of purposive sampling so that different quintiles and geographic areas were represented. Information obtained from a comprehensive literature study on relevant motivation theories, on reading motivation in practice and on the relationship among their reading motivation, amount of reading, reading comprehension and academic achievement, as well as from the results of an empirical investigation of the reading motivation of specific grade 9 learners, was used to compile a reading motivation profile of Afrikaans-speaking adolescent readers. The motivation theories on which motivation in this study was based, were the social-cognitive theory, the self-efficacy theory, the ecological system theory of human development and the expectancy-value theory, because these theories emphasise the individual's behaviour within particular social contexts and because constructs such as self-efficacy, task value and mastery, which emanate from these theories, play a cardinal role in determining suitable reading motivation strategies for specific readers. It was essential to compile a reading motivation profile of Afrikaans-speaking adolescent readers before a reading motivation framework for these adolescent readers could be compiled. The reading motivation framework recommends specific reading motivation strategies various social role-players in the school and classroom environments can implement so as to improve Afrikaans-speaking adolescent readers' reading motivation levels. The various social role-players that would influence the Afrikaans-speaking adolescent reader's reading motivation and the reading motivation strategies each of them could use, was systematised (namely the Department of Education, the school principal and management team, teachers and parents). The essence of the contribution made by this study is that a reading motivation profile of a group of Afrikaans-speaking adolescent readers (grade 9 learners) could be compiled, that clear mutual relationships among the respondents' reading motivation and their amount of reading, reading comprehension and academic achievement came to the fore from this study and that a reading motivation framework could be developed by means of which to improve the reading motivation levels of these adolescent readers.en_US
dc.language.isootheren_US
dc.subjectAdolessenteleser(s)en_US
dc.subjectAfrikaans Huistaalen_US
dc.subjectAfrikaanssprekende adolessenteen_US
dc.subjectAkademiese prestasieen_US
dc.subjectEksterne en interne faktoreen_US
dc.subjectEkstrinsieke motiveringen_US
dc.subjectIntrinsieke motiveringen_US
dc.subjectLeesbegripen_US
dc.subjectLeeshoeveelheiden_US
dc.subjectLeesmodelen_US
dc.subjectLeesmotiveringen_US
dc.subjectMotiveringen_US
dc.subjectMRQen_US
dc.subjectAdolescent reader(s)en_US
dc.subjectAfrikaans Home Languageen_US
dc.subjectAfrikaans-speaking adolescent(s)en_US
dc.subjectAcademic achievementen_US
dc.subjectExternal and internal factorsen_US
dc.subjectExtrinsic motivationen_US
dc.subjectIntrinsic motivationen_US
dc.subjectMotivationen_US
dc.subjectAmount of readingen_US
dc.subjectReading comprehensionen_US
dc.subjectReading modelen_US
dc.subjectReading motivationen_US
dc.title? Leesmotiveringsprofiel van en ? -raamwerk vir Afrikaanssprekende adolessentelesersafr
dc.typeThesisen_US
dc.description.thesistypeDoctoralen_US


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