Family Involvement in Primary School Children’s Writing: A Qualitative Study with Parent Focus Groups
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Family Home Context and Writing
1.2. Present Study
- Identify, describe, and classify writing practices in the homes of primary school students. The expectation is to create a classification of home writing practice types, similar to the one produced in the empirical theoretical reading field by the Home Literacy Model (Sénéchal, 2006; Sénéchal & LeFevre, 2014). That model splits the home literacy environment into two dimensions, the formal and the informal. The informal dimension includes experiences and activities in which children are passively or incidentally exposed to written language, where the communicative function—the message—is the focus of attention. In the formal dimension, the focus is on the written material itself and how it is configured or structured. In this case, the children are more active, and the parents take on a more formal teaching role.
- Identify, describe, and classify the type of writing support families provide when they participate in children’s home writing activities. The expectation is to systematise and organise the types of writing activities families do, identifying both instructional support—that is specific and linked to writing skills—and motivational or contextual support, in line with the more general work in the field of literacy (Aram et al., 2020; Sénéchal et al., 2017; Krijnen et al., 2020). We expect to find variation in both writing practices and family support related to the children’s school year and their associated level of writing development (Alston-Abel & Berninger, 2018; Robledo et al., 2025).
- Understand the challenges and difficulties families face when involving themselves in their children learning to write, along with strategies and processes for improving their involvement and dealing with challenges. In this case, we expect that those difficulties and the strategies they suggest will be linked to parental characteristics (Aram & Levin, 2011; Herrera & Guayana, 2022; Orellana et al., 2025), emotional and ability-related aspects in the children (Santangelo, 2014), and aspects linked to the family’s socio-school context (Luna et al., 2019; Penderi et al., 2023).
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sample
2.2. Instrument
2.3. Design and Procedure
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Types of Home Writing Practices
3.2. Types of Family Support for Writing
3.3. Difficulties Families Face Involving Themselves in Writing and Strategies for Improvement
4. Discussion and Conclusions
4.1. Primary School Students’ Writing Practices at Home
4.2. Family Support for Children’s Writing
4.3. Challenges in Family Involvement in Writing and Strategies for Improvement
4.4. General Conclusions, Limitations, and Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
| Code | Agreement | Disagreement | Coded Segments | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Organisational support (MG) | 54 | 0 | 54 | 100.00 |
| MG-O | 6 | 0 | 6 | 100.00 |
| MG-R | 44 | 2 | 46 | 95.65 |
| Motivational support (MS) | 140 | 8 | 148 | 94.59 |
| MS-P | 44 | 3 | 47 | 93.62 |
| MS-I | 14 | 1 | 15 | 93.33 |
| MS-R | 84 | 3 | 87 | 96.55 |
| Instructional support (IS) | 158 | 4 | 162 | 97.53 |
| IS-IC | 20 | 1 | 21 | 95.24 |
| IS-DC | 50 | 6 | 56 | 89.29 |
| IS-G | 38 | 3 | 41 | 92.68 |
| IS-E | 28 | 4 | 32 | 87.50 |
| IS-M | 50 | 5 | 55 | 90.91 |
| IS-GC | 18 | 2 | 20 | 90.00 |
| Formal practices (FP) | 184 | 12 | 196 | 93.88 |
| FP-LH | 80 | 6 | 86 | 93.02 |
| FP-TC | 34 | 3 | 37 | 91.89 |
| FP-G | 6 | 0 | 6 | 100.00 |
| FP-S | 30 | 1 | 31 | 96.77 |
| FP-H | 46 | 1 | 47 | 97.87 |
| Informal practices (IP) | 194 | 6 | 200 | 97.00 |
| IP-R | 44 | 4 | 48 | 91.67 |
| IP L | 46 | 2 | 48 | 95.83 |
| IP-C | 104 | 5 | 109 | 95.41 |
| Total | 1516 | 82 | 1598 | 94.87 |
| Kappa index Calculation | Rater 1 | |||
| 1 | 0 | |||
| Rater 2 | 1 | a = 1516 | b = 28 | 1544 |
| 0 | c = 54 | 0 | 54 | |
| 1570 | 28 | 1598 | ||
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| Gender | Age | Studies * | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | Min. | Max. | Mean | Moderate | Higher | |
| FG1 | 8 | 0 | 40 | 48 | 43.87 | 2 | 6 |
| FG2 | 7 | 1 | 39 | 48 | 43.00 | 3 | 5 |
| FG3 | 12 | 4 | 39 | 54 | 43.56 | 6 | 10 |
| Total | 27 | 5 | 39 | 54 | 43.47 | 11 | 21 |
| Children Sex | School | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | Public | Independent | Rural | Urban | |
| FG1 | 3 | 5 | 6 | 2 | 1 | 7 |
| FG2 | 6 | 2 | 6 | 2 | 3 | 5 |
| FG3 | 2 | 14 | 13 | 3 | 2 | 14 |
| Total | 11 | 21 | 25 | 6 | 6 | 26 |
| Block | Purpose | General Questions | Follow-Up Questions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. General Perception of Writing | To contextualise the interview by identifying parental attitudes toward writing. |
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| 2. Informal Writing Practices at Home | To understand the informal writing practices (related to everyday or routine activities that involve writing) that occur in the home and how they are done. |
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| 3. Formal Writing Practices at Home | To understand the types of formal practices (related to the direct teaching of writing skills) that are done at home and how they are done. |
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| 4. Family Writing Support at Home | To understand the types of support families provide to children during writing activities at home and how they are applied. |
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| 5. General Reflections | To conclude the interview by addressing the challenges families face in supporting writing at home and the strategies they employ to address them. |
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| Category | Subcategories | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Informal Practices (IP) | Socio-communicative informal practices (IP-C): Refers to informal writing practices aimed at communication, conveying information, or reminders through writing. | Writing shopping lists, recipes, or menus. Sending messages via WhatsApp or other social media. Writing letters to friends or family. Leaving notes or messages among siblings, family, or friends. Creating birthday cards, invitations, or postcards. |
| Informal leisure practices (IP-L): Refers to informal writing practices where writing is used for fun, entertainment, or as a pastime. | Writing stories. Practicing lettering. Engaging in role-play games involving writing (e.g., playing teachers, waiters). Imitating TV programs that require writing skills (e.g., spelling shows). | |
| Informal reflective or thought-management practices (IP-R): Informal practices using writing for reflection, expressing emotions, or managing thoughts or tasks. | Keeping a personal diary or journal. Writing notes or planning in a diary. Creating travel journals to record experiences. | |
| Formal Practices (FP) | Handwriting (FP-H): Formal practice of writing to improve clarity and appearance of letters. | Calligraphy workbooks, letter dictation. |
| Spelling (FP-S): Formal practice of spelling words correctly according to language conventions. | Accent practice exercises, using digital spelling apps (Gualinga), dictation. | |
| Grammar (FP-G): Formal practice of implementing grammatical rules correctly in writing. | Writing complex words/phrases. | |
| Text composition (FP-TC): Formal practices related to writing different types of texts in a coherent, structured way, including planning and reviewing processes. | Composing various texts (stories, opinion, essays). Thinking before writing. Reviewing text to ensure coherence. | |
| Writing for learning and homework (FP-LH): Formal writing practices aimed at facilitating learning, memorising academic content, or completing written homework. | Creating outlines, summaries for study. Daily correction of school assignments. |
| Informal Practices | Communicative | Leisure | Thinking or Managing Thoughts | ||
| FG1 | 43.8% | 31.3% | 25.0% | ||
| FG2 | 58.1% | 22.6% | 19.4% | ||
| FG3 | 60.5% | 23.7% | 15.8% | ||
| General | 54.5% | 23.8% | 21.8% | ||
| Formal Practices | Homework and Learning | Handwriting | Composing Texts | Spelling | Grammar |
| FG1 | 58.8% | 14.7% | 17.6% | 8.8% | 0.0% |
| FG2 | 39.3% | 21.4% | 28.6% | 7.1% | 3.6% |
| FG3 | 25.6% | 30.2% | 14.0% | 25.6% | 4.7% |
| General | 40% | 22.9% | 19.0% | 15.2% | 2.9% |
| Category | Subcategories | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Instructional or Content Support (IS) | Grapho-phonemic or handwriting support (IS-GC): Support focused on teaching or reinforcing handwriting or grapheme-phoneme conversion skills. | Correction of posture and pencil grip. We teach them a trick to draw lines, so their writing does not slant. Handwriting exercises. Use of visual guides for grapheme-phoneme correspondence. Support in identifying sounds and letters. Activities for segmenting and blending phonemes. I like to give them tracing exercises. |
| Explanation (IS-E): The family member verbally explains, provides information, instructions, or directives to the student regarding writing-related content or procedures (indicating how it should be done). | General: Detailed explanations, offering or repeating instructions. They explain how they do it themselves. The older sibling teaches both content and tactics. Grammar-text composition: In a composition, let us use short sentences that make sense, that have a subject, verb, and something more. We need to look for the ending, so it makes sense. Spelling: This is written like this, it either has an ‘h’ or it does not. | |
| Guidance-accompaniment (IS-A): Family members guide children during writing tasks, offering specific feedback and/or prompting reflection on their work. | Text composition: In a story or composition, I try to guide them a bit—first, think about the beginning, let us identify the characters. They cannot always come up with ideas, so you have to give them a hint—‘What do you think if…?’ To foster imagination, creativity, and reflection, if they write very short responses or brief answers, we ask them questions. | |
| Modelling and Observational Support (IS-M): Providing examples of everyday writing use, modelling writing procedures, or examples of correct written products helps the child develop an interest in writing and learn or practice through imitation and observation of models. | They see us writing and want to write themselves. When they see that I have a planner to write things down, they want to have their own as well. They see family members writing WhatsApp messages, notes at home, shopping lists, planners, letters… Their siblings write notes, and they imitate and respond. The best approach is example; if they see you writing, that is the best model. Siblings write comics or notes together… We show examples of well-structured texts. They watch their sibling write, and they imitate. They replicate writing tasks that their older siblings do. | |
| Correction: Family members offer corrective support based on the child’s work, which may include: | ||
| Handwriting: We make them erase it and encourage them to write more neatly. We motivate them to write better—smaller and clearer Spelling: If they make a mistake, I ask them to correct it. When they make spelling mistakes, I like to point them out. Any mistake I see, I tell them. If there’s an error, I make them correct it. Text Composition (Revision): If they write a story, I suggest reading it together to check if it makes sense and flows well. | |
| Spelling: I correct all spelling mistakes. ‘Helicopter’ starts with an ‘h.’ ‘Bajar’ is spelled with a ‘j.’ Grammar: You need a comma here. | |
| Spelling: There’s an error in this word. Read it again; there’s a mistake. Text Composition: Check if this part does not make sense. While reviewing, I might ask, ‘Does this sound a bit off? How could we put it differently?’ | |
| Motivational Support (MS) | Reinforcement (MS-R): Positive reinforcement for successful attempts, including rewards, incentives, or positive feedback. | Celebrating academic achievements. Praise their effort/feedback. Provide an outlet for what they have written; if they write a letter to a friend, send it. Save the notes they write to you; it shows them that what they write has value. |
| Emphasising importance (MS-I): The child is encouraged to write, emphasising the importance of writing and its educational, communicative, professional, and other uses. | Explain the significance of writing. Emphasise how essential writing is; otherwise, I would not be able to communicate. I stress to them the importance of writing things down, as I believe it is the way to retain and learn information. | |
| Play-based support (MS-P): Family members or siblings support writing through playful activities. | They play as if they were teachers, which helps them learn while having fun together. | |
| Management Support (MG) | Resource Support (MG-R): Providing materials, technology, or tools that facilitate and/or motivate writing skill development. | Use of writing materials adapted to their needs (lined paper, pens). Use of attractive notebooks and journals. Use of educational software and learning applications. Interactive digital tools (voice dictation, spell checker, etc.). Use of monitoring platforms. Use of graphic organisers (concept maps, flowcharts). |
| Time-space organisation support (MG-O): Strategies and tools for managing time and workspace effectively. | Using visual calendars and diaries. Creating a dedicated homework space. Using timers to mark study periods. |
| Instructional Support | Motivational Support | Organisational Support | |
|---|---|---|---|
| FG1 | 37.7% | 46.3% | 15.9% |
| FG2 | 73.6% | 22.4% | 3.9% |
| FG3 | 46% | 38.1% | 15% |
| General | 52.9% | 35.3% | 11.7% |
| CATEGORY | EXAMPLES |
|---|---|
| Challenges associated with child-related variables | |
| Resistance and lack of motivation (FM): the child exhibits resistance or a lack of interest in writing. | I notice that if you do not tell children to write, they do not write. It is always difficult as it requires a greater intellectual and physical effort. Kids are motivated by other things, like videogames. It is very hard to compete with new technology and so motivating children to read and write is complicated. It is not an activity they like, they prefer drawing. Writing does not motivate them because they do not see it so much, there are less and less references. |
| Frustration with difficulties (FD): challenges related to feelings of frustration arising when children find writing tasks difficult. | Writing exhausts him. When it does not come out well it is really hard for them. They do not like being corrected at all. The youngest is always frustrated because they cannot write straight. They get irritated and cranky when they write essays because they do not know how to properly structure them. |
| Perceptions or judgements about writing tasks (PES): difficulties related to children’s ideas, beliefs, and appreciation of writing. | They do not think writing’s important. They see writing as a boring, tedious activity that is irrelevant to their daily lives. Writing is boring for them, it is tiresome. They see it as a responsibility that they want to be rid of as quickly as possible. |
| Challenges associated with school-emotional variables | |
| Digitalisation of communication (DigC): difficulties related to the impact of digital tools on writing. | The use of autocorrect and abbreviations in written communication. They do not know how to write thanks to mobiles and technology. They’re used to WhatsApp, they shorten words and they do not write well. We are in an audiovisual age and it seems as though writing has been relegated to school. They’re used to always having a keyboard and if you do not make them pick up a pen and write, well then. |
| Influence of the school environment (IEN): difficulties related to the influence of the practices and attitudes towards writing in the school environment. | Writing being backgrounded in school. The use of only digital activities and flashcards. My son has not been encouraged to read or write when he really needs it. I think that it is all the rush and the class sizes. There’s no dictation at school. |
| Challenges associated with family-related variables | |
| Parental time and availability (TDP): difficulties related to the time parents have available for helping or supervising their children’s home writing practice. | It is hard to attend school events related to writing. I do not have enough time because of work to help the kids. It is about the time you have to spend, it is not easy because we’ve all got our commitments. It depends on what a rush you’re in. When you have four kids, and you work, when you get home you do what you can. Maybe you do not pay as much attention to these things as you should. |
| Lack of parental knowledge or ability to help with writing (IPD): parents’ perceived lack of knowledge, ability, or support to be able to help with their children’s writing. | Parents do not know the guidelines to properly help their children. Parents cannot properly explain grammatical rules. I do not know enough to be ahead of my child. I do not have enough support or advice to help them. The teachers set the standards, and parents do not want to be counterproductive so we do not contradict them. It is harder to help them with homework because of the difficulty. |
| Tailored parental supervision and support (SAP): difficulties related to tailoring the amount and type of supervision parents give their children according to their progress and their needs. | Young children who do not do their writing homework without a parent’s direct supervision. Difficulties finding the proper balance between the child’s independence and offering support they need, without overstepping. If school sets them a writing, great; if I do that at home it probably means half an hour of standing over him and nagging. |
| Lack of parental interest (FIP): parents who are not interested in their children’s writing or in their role as educators. | Some parents do not think they should have to be the ones to help their children. A lack of interest in their children developing writing skills. No, that is all I need, after work I am not going to go over and correct homework. |
| Children | Socio-School | Family | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Motivation | Frustration | Perceptions | Digitalisation | School Environment | Parental Supervision | Time | Knowledge | Interest | |
| FG1 | 21.4% | 14.3% | 14.3% | 14.3% | 7.1% | 7.1% | 7.1% | 7.1% | 7.1% |
| FG2 | 19.0% | 19% | 14.3% | 9.5% | 9.5% | 9.5% | 9.5% | 4.8% | 4.8% |
| FG3 | 47.4% | 5.3% | 5.3% | 10.5% | 10.5% | 5.3% | 5.3% | 10.5% | 0.0% |
| TOTAL | 29.6% | 13% | 11.1% | 11.1% | 9.3% | 7.4% | 7.4% | 7.4% | 3.7% |
| CATEGORY | EXAMPLES |
|---|---|
| Focus on enjoyment and motivation | Play writing games or activities such as lettering. Encourage writing in relation to topics of interest to improve motivation. Write letters to pensioners in old people’s homes. |
| Include writing in everyday activities | Use task lists, shopping lists, or lists for personal events. Encourage children to keep a journal. Create a diary/calendar to encourage planning. |
| Balance between technology and writing by hand | Use digital dictation and correction tools. Incorporate activities that alternate between handwriting and using digital tools. |
| Collaboration between school and home | Active parental participation in school tasks. Correct and help with written tasks. Give children time and space they need to write. Parent-teacher meetings. Provide school-suggested writing activities at home. Workshops for parents. Extracurricular activities related to improving writing. Round-tables. |
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Algorri-Diez, L.; Rodríguez, C.; Robledo, P. Family Involvement in Primary School Children’s Writing: A Qualitative Study with Parent Focus Groups. Educ. Sci. 2025, 15, 1711. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15121711
Algorri-Diez L, Rodríguez C, Robledo P. Family Involvement in Primary School Children’s Writing: A Qualitative Study with Parent Focus Groups. Education Sciences. 2025; 15(12):1711. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15121711
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlgorri-Diez, Laura, Celestino Rodríguez, and Patricia Robledo. 2025. "Family Involvement in Primary School Children’s Writing: A Qualitative Study with Parent Focus Groups" Education Sciences 15, no. 12: 1711. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15121711
APA StyleAlgorri-Diez, L., Rodríguez, C., & Robledo, P. (2025). Family Involvement in Primary School Children’s Writing: A Qualitative Study with Parent Focus Groups. Education Sciences, 15(12), 1711. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15121711

