📚 Did you know that your involvement in your child's early literacy experiences can make a big difference? Research shows that caregiver engagement is the strongest factor in boosting the effectiveness of library programs for kids. Whether it's attending story-time sessions or simply reading together at home, your participation plays a crucial role in their literacy journey. By fostering a rich home literacy environment and utilizing library resources, you can support vocabulary growth and readiness for school. Let's make reading a fun and regular part of everyday life! 🌟
Read the full research: https://trellison.com/research/library-literacy/lit-review
#EarlyLiteracy #CaregiverEngagement
What this post claims
Claim focus: Caregiver engagement is the strongest mediator of program effect
Audience: caregiver
Evidence — every claim is traceable
Evidence base
Every claim in this post is paraphrased from the following public-domain federal research. Click through to the original source.
This post was drafted under Trellison content is untethered to any single source.
Trellison's authority comes from independence. We synthesize across the full evidence base — ECLS-B, ECLS-K, WWC, OELA, IMLS/Mathematica, peer-reviewed literature — and never let any single grant evaluation, institution, journal, or article carry the message in its own voice. Song lyrics, video narration, and on-screen text in Trellison content do not name-check a single source. End-card citations and metadata link the work to its evidence trail; the body stays about the universally observable truth: caregivers + reading + libraries + early years + the five ECRR practices.
Policy rules applied:
Body content (lyrics, narration, on-screen subtitles) must NOT name any single institution, paper title, journal, grant program, or first-author surname.
End-card / final-frame citation block lists every evidence_corpus row referenced.
Per-claim lower-third overlays may include the evidence_id link but not institution names in the visible text.
Courtesy tracks (intentionally named-checking a source as a thank-you to that source) must be tagged editorial_use='courtesy_to_source_only' and excluded from Trellison-channel publication.
When multiple sources converge on a claim, prefer phrasings like 'multiple longitudinal studies show', 'the evidence base finds', 'federal research consistently demonstrates' over single-source attribution.
Roast-proof guarantee. Every factual statement in the post above is paraphrased from at least one federally-paid public-domain source listed in the "Evidence" section. We paraphrase because our editorial policy forbids body-level name-checks — attribution lives here, on the receipts page. If you find a claim you believe is unsupported, reply with the specific sentence and we will either cite it to a source in this page or retract it publicly.