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Early Literacy Strategies

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Title: Early Literacy Strategies


1
Early Literacy Strategies
  • Bev Flückiger
  • Griffith University

2
Targeted Intervention
Few children
Point-in-time Support
Some children
Quality Teaching
All children
School Literacy Strategy
All staff
Shared Philosophy
Whole school community
3
  • We must avoid the push-down of teaching methods
    into Prep.
  • We must ensure rigour across the Early Years.

4
View of Children
  • Have a kitbag of resources
  • Learn by acting and doing
  • Strive to make meaning and be
  • successful
  • Use strategies and tactics
  • Enact agency and voice

5
  • Scaffolder of Learning
  • listens and responds
  • builds understandings
  • makes learning explicit and relevant
  • builds connections
  • investigates alternative ways
  • discusses outcomes of choices
  • challenges thinking
  • reduces support as independence grows

6
Pathways to Prevention
  • Strong correlation between childrens language
    development, their behaviour and success in
    school.
  • 38 receptive vocabulary difficulties
  • 19 expressive vocabulary difficulties
  • 44 language complexity difficulties

Homel et al. (2006).
7
Features of Conversation
  • Two (or more) speakers cooperate.
  • The speakers draw upon their knowledge of the
    world and their ability to use language.
  • Each speaker is supported by the listener through
    eye contact, attention and encouraging, affirming
    utterances of yes! absolutely! Uh-huh and
    so on.
  • A speaker ensures that the listener has
    understood and adapts the message accordingly.
  • The co-constructed message is genuinely
    negotiated.
  • There is interest and engagement from both
    parties.
  • In the best of conversations, the interaction
    occurs over a minimum of five exchanges, from
    which both parties benefit, learn, and gain
    enjoyment.
  • Riley, J. (2006).

8
Implications
  • The most important aspect of childrens language
    experience is its amount.
  • The most important aspect in early years
    classrooms is the amount of talk actually going
    on, moment by moment, between children and their
    teachers.

9
Phonological awareness skills
  • Word Level
  • - recognize how many words are in a sentence
  • Syllable Level
  • -segment and blend words of at least 3
    syllables
  • Rhyme Level
  • - understand the concept of rhyming
  • - recognize and generate rhyming words
  • Sound Level
  • - isolate the beginning or ending sound in
    words
  • - segment and blend sounds in a word with
    three sounds
  • - change a sound in a word to make a new word
    in familiar
  • games and songs

10
Without direct instructional support, almost one
quarter of all children are unaware of phonemes
..which impacts on learning to read. (Adams,
Foorman, Lundberg Beeler,1998). 
11
Fourth Grade Slump
  • Lack comprehension strategies
  • Lack of fluency and automaticity
  • (Chall, 1983, 1996 Stanovich, 1986)
  • Language gap
  • (Hirsch, 2003)

12
  • Because of the developmental nature of
    reading, the later one waits to strengthen
    weaknesses, the more difficult it is for the
    children to cope with the increasing literacy
    demands in the later grades.
  • Chall Jacobs, 2003.

13
Active comprehension strategies
Predicting
Questioning the text
Monitoring comprehension
  • Making
  • connections
  • Text-to-text
  • Text-to-self

Visualizing
Comprehension Strategies at work
Summarizing
Finding important information
Inferring
QUT Literacy Secretariat, 2009.
14
Building Comprehension Skills
  • Read Alouds
  • Page peeping
  • Asking Questions
  • Elbow partners -The Big Idea
  • Concept mapping, story mapping
  • Accountable talk
  • Comic strips and picture strips
  • Telling a friend inside outside circles
  • Pictures in the mind drawing
  • Did that make sense to me?

15
Principles that underpin comprehension
  • Fluency allows the mind to concentrate on
    comprehension
  • Breadth of vocabulary increases comprehension
    and facilitates further learning and
  • Domain knowledge increases fluency, broadens
    vocabulary and enables deeper comprehension.
  • Hirsch, 2003

16
Fluency
Expressive interpretation
automaticity
accuracy
Word decoding
Comprehension
17
To read fluently children require
  • Accurate decoding of words in text
  • Automaticity, or decoding words with
  • minimal use of attentional resources and
  • Appropriate use of phrasing and
  • expression to convey meaning.

18
Strategies to develop fluency
  • Repeated oral reading practice
  • Echo reading
  • Choral reading
  • Readers Theatre
  • Paired reading
  • Recorded reading
  • Computer assisted reading
  • Buddy reading (peer tutoring)

19
  • The Three Billy Goats Gruff Reader's Theatre
  • Seven Characters Narrator1, Narrator 2, Narrator
    3, Troll, Little Billy Goat, Middle-Sized Billy
    Goat, and Big Billy Goat
  • NARRATOR 1 Once upon a time there were three
    billy goat brothers named Gruff.
  • NARRATOR 2 The three billy goats lived by a
    river.
  • NARRATOR 3 Across the river was a meadow with
    tall green grass.
  • NARRATOR 1 One day, the billy goats wanted to
    cross the river to eat the grass.
  • NARRATOR 2 But there was only one bridge across
    the river.
  • NARRATOR 3 And under that bridge lived a mean,
    hungry troll.
  • NARRATOR 1 The troll had eyes as big as saucers
    and a nose as long as a poker.

20
Knowledge of Words and the World
  • Emphasize oral comprehension
  • Larger focus on expository text
  • Systematically build word and world knowledge

21
In the early years we need to
  • teach decoding skills
  • develop fluency
  • develop automaticity
  • teach vocabulary
  • build word knowledge
  • teach children to use active
  • comprehension strategies
  • encourage students to monitor their
  • own comprehension

22
Primary Classroom teaching
  • 76 teacher centred (didactic)
  • 16 subject centred
  • 6 child centred
  • Limited student engagement
  • Borman (2005)

23
Teaching with rigour in the early years
classroomWhat does that look like?
24
Fullan, Hill Crevola, 2006.
25
Personalization
  • Puts each and every child at the centre and
    provides an education that is tailored to the
    students learning and motivational needs at any
    given time
  • Fullan, Hill, Crevola, 2006.

26
Precision
  • To get something right.
  • Precision is in the service of personalization
    because it means to be uniquely accurate, that is
    precise to the learning needs of individuals.
  • Fullan, Hill, Crevola, 2006

27
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28
Reading Assessment
  • Oral language development
  • Comprehension of texts
  • Fluency
  • Concepts about print
  • Phonemic awareness
  • Letter identification
  • Phonics
  • Word knowledge
  • Vocabulary

29
Professional Learning
  • Focused on-going learning for
  • each and every teacher
  • Daily learning is needed
  • individually and collectively
  • Schools need to work from the
  • classroom outward - not
  • centrally developed PD
  • Professional development works when it is
    school-based and embedded in the daily work of
    teachers
  • Fullan, Hill, Crevola, 2006

30
Targeted Intervention
Few children
Point-in-time Support
Some children
Quality Teaching
All children
School Literacy Strategy
All staff
Shared Philosophy
Whole school community
31
System
District
school and community
Teacher Child
32
References
  • Adams, M., Foorman, B., Lundberg, L. Beeler, T.
    (1998). The elusive phoneme Why phonemic
    awareness is so important and how to help
    children develop it. American Educator, 22,
    18-29).
  • Baumann, J. Ware, D. Carr Edwards, E. (2007).
    Bumping into spicy, tasty words that catch your
    tongue A formative experiment on vocabulary
    instruction. The Reading Teacher, 61(2),
    pp.108-122.
  • Borman, K. Associates. (2005). Meaningful
    urban education reform. Albany State University
    of New York Press.
  • Chall, J. (1983). Stages of reading development.
    New York McGraw-Hill.
  • Chall, J. (1996). Learning to read The great
    debate (Third Edition). New York McGraw-Hill.
  • Chall, J.S., Jacobs, V.A. (2003). Poor
    childrens fourth-grade slump. American Educator,
    27(1), 1415, 44.
  • Fullan, M. Hill, P. Crevola, C. (2006).
    Breakthrough. Thousand Oaks, CA Corwin Press.
  • Gambrell, L. (2005). Reading literature,
    reading text, reading the internet The times
    they are achanging. The Reading Teacher 58(6),
    588-591.
  • Hirsch, E.D. (2003). Reading comprehension
    requires knowledge of words and the world.
    American Educator retrieved online 20.03.09.
  • Homel et al. (2006). The Pathways to Prevention
    Project The First Five Years, 1099-2004. Sydney
    Mission Australia and the Key Centre for ethics,
    Law Justice Governance.
  • Hart, E. Risley, T. (2003). The Early
    Catastrophe. American Educator. Retrieved
    online 20.03.09.
  • QUT Literacy Secretariat, (2009). Effective
    instruction in reading comprehension.
    Professional learning series for classroom
    teachers. Queensland University of Technology.
  • Rasinski, T. V. (2003). The fluent reader Oral
    reading strategies for building word recognition,
    fluency and comprehension. New York Scholastic.
  • Riley, J. (2006). Language and Literacy 3-7.
    London Sage Publications.
  • Stanovich, K.E. (1986). Matthew effects in
    reading Some consequences of individual
    differences in the acquisition of literacy.
    Reading Research Quarterly, 21, 360 -407.
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