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Literacy as a pathway between schooling and health-related communication skills: a study of Venezuelan mothers

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2005

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Schnell-Anzola, Beatrice, Meredith L. Rowe, and Robert A LeVine. 2005. Literacy as a pathway between schooling and health-related communication skills: a study of Venezuelan mothers. International Journal of Educational Development 25, no. 1:19-37

Abstract

This article addresses the mechanisms by which women’s schooling might affect the survival and health of their children. A theoretical model is proposed in which academic literacy skills serve as a pathway between formal schooling and maternal health-related behaviors. The model is tested through multivariate analyses of interview and literacy data from 161 mothers in a poor, urban community in Venezuela. Results show that the academic literacy skills women learned in school and retained into adulthood, predict their health-related communication skills above and beyond the amount of schooling they received. The importance of female schooling in developing countries is discussed.

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