Abstract:
The majority of learners in Kenya’s primary school are not able to read at early grade level.
With the support of United States Agency International Development and Department for
International Development, Kenya’s Ministry of Education came up with the Early Grade
Reading Activities (EGRA) with the aim of improving reading in grades one to three. This
study sought to investigate the influence of the Early Grade Reading interventions on the
reading abilities of learners in public primary schools in Kiambu County. The objectives of
the study were: to establish the influence of teachers’ capacity-building intervention on
learners’reading abilities; the influence of Early Grade Readtng Activities teaching and
learning resources on learners’reading abilities; the influence of monitoring and evaluation on
learner’s reading abilities; and the influence of ICT use by teachers on learners’ reading
abilities. The study was guided by the Vygotsky’s Socio-cultural Cognitive Development
Theory and Holdaway Theory of Literacy Development. It employed the descriptive survey
research design. The target population was 26,156 respondants from the 576 public primary
schools in Kiambu County. This population comprised 1,408 grade one to three teachers and
24,748 grade 3 learners in the public primary schools in Kiambu County. A sample of 1066
individuals comprising of 57 lower grade teachers and 1009 grade 3 learners were selected
using the cluster sampling technique. Questionnaires were used to collect data from the
teachers while an achievement test was used to collect data from learners. A pilot study was
carried out to establish validity and reliability of the research instruments. Data was analysed
using frequencies, percentages, means, and standard deviation while the multiple linear
regression method was used to test the relationships between variables at the 0.05 level of
significance. Results showed that teachers’ capacity building interventions (β= 0.474, t=
4.055, p= .000) had a p-value that is less than 0.05 level of significance, which led to the
rejection of the first hypothesis of the study. These results imply that teacher capacity
building interventions have a positive and statistically significant influence on reading
abilities of early grade learners in public primary schools in Kiambu County. EGRA teaching
and learning resources (β= 0.209, t= 2.263, p= .028) also had a p-value that is less than the
0.05 level of significance, which led to the rejection of the second hypothesis of the study.
This implies that EGRA teaching and learning resources have a positive and statistically
significant influence on reading abilities of early grade learners in public primary schools in
Kiambu County. Similarly, EGRA monitoring and evaluation (β= 0.231, t= 2.295, p= .026)
had a p-value that is less than the 0.05 significance level, which led to the rejection of the
third hypothesis of the study. This implies that EGRA monitoring and evaluation has a
positive and statistically significant influence on reading abilities of early grade learners in
public primary schools in Kiambu County. On the other hand, EGRA ICT interventions
(β=0.089, t= 0.933, p= 0.356) had a p-value that is less than 0.05 level of significance, which
meant that there was no sufficient evidence to reject the fourth hypothesis of the study. This
implied that EGRA ICT interventions do not have a statistically significant influence on
reading abilities of early grade learners in public primary schools in Kiambu County. Based
on the findings, the study concludes that interventions that seek to build teacher capacity,
improve teaching and learning resources, and enhance instructional monitoring and
evaluation are effective in improving early grade reading abilities. The study recommends
that the Ministry of Education should sustain these interventions. However there is need to
reevaluate how the ICT interventions were implemented because results indicate that these
interventions were not having a significant influence on learners’ reading ability.