Title: Early Literacy: Building a Strong Foundation
1Early Literacy Building a Strong Foundation
Dr. Denise P. Gibbs, Director Alabama Scottish
Rite Foundation Learning Centers gibbsdenise_at_ao
l.com
2In this session, we will.
- get familiar with essential early literacy
skills including oral language, print concepts
(experiences with books) and phonological
awareness. - Learn about techniques, which can be used in
every day interactions with children to stimulate
oral language development. - Learn about techniques, which can be used in
every day interactions with children to stimulate
development of early print concepts. - Learn about techniques, which can be used in
every day interactions with children to stimulate
phonological awareness skills.
3Emergent Literacy Infants environment
- Skills which lead to literacy begin in earliest
infancy as the baby has.. - interactions involving talking
- interactions involving print
4Five Key Environmental Factors
- Good language partners
- Positive experiences with print
- Phonological awareness and letter recognition
- Family attitudes
- Effective storybook activities.
5Importance of early experiences
- Research indicates that the environment of
infants, toddlers, and preschoolers plays a
critical role in their successful reading
development. - What we do every day (from the daywe bring them
home from the hospital) really matters!
6Creating positive experiences involving talking
- Talk or sing during most interactions with the
baby. - Do use correct speech sounds-NO BABY TALK
- Dont use long sentences
- Do talk/sing directly TO the baby
- Do use a gentle and loving tone of voice
- Make intonation interesting and varied
- Do say babys name often! (it cues them to listen
to what comes next as they get older)
7Never too young for positive experiences with
talking
8Creating positive experiences involving talking
- Some things to say.
- While changing a diaper
- Ooo, Cam youre wet! Wet-all dry, stinky-all
clean, wet diaper, stinky diaper, clean diaper - Change your diaper-all done
- While giving a bottle
- Time to eat, youre hungry, hungry baby, mmmm
good milk, all gone milk
9Create positive experiences involving talking
- While giving a bath
- Water, soap, wash your arm, wash your leg, wash
your - All clean, towel, dry your.
10Create positive experiences involving talking
- While feeding
- Mmmm yum carrots!
- More carrots
- Want some carrots
- Another bite
- Eat carrots
- All gone carrots
11Create positive experiences involving talking
- While holding or rocking
- SING!
- Snuggle
- speak your heart I love you. youre a big boy,
my sweet baby, I love youre fingers, sweet
little fingers
12Create positive experiences involving talking
Morgan-3 yrsCam-3 mo
- Include siblings/cousins!
- Babies liketo listen to people who are
closerto their size!
Cam-3 yrsAubrey-17 mo
13Good language partners provide indirect language
stimulation
- Indirect language stimulation do not tell the
child to say this or to say that! - Child may withdraw from speaking due to the
pressure to perform. - Do provide words to frame the childs play and
activities.
14Indirect language stimulation techniques
- Parallel Talk (child-centered)
- Adult describes what the child is doing, hearing,
seeing, etc as he does it - Youre building the fence.
- You see the horse.
- (adult gives the child 4-5 words to describe the
action that child is involved in)
15Indirect language stimulation techniques
- Self-Talk (adult-centered)
- Adult describes what she is doing, hearing,
seeing, etc as she does it - Im washing your foot.
- I got the soap
- (give the child words for what he sees you doing)
16Indirect language stimulation techniques
- Description (object-centered)
- Adult describes the objects the child sees or
interacts with. - That car is broken.
- That block is big.
- (give the child words to describe things he
seems to be interested in looking at)
17Indirect language stimulation techniques
- Comments
- Adult gives information or describes upcoming
activities. - We are going to go outside.
- We need to put on our shoes.
- This is our new friend.
- (provides words to help the child begin to think
with words)
18Indirect language stimulation techniques
- Open-ended questions (can not be answered yes or
no nor with a single word answer) - Adult asks questions to get the child to
verbalize their thinking. - What do you think will happen if the lid gets
stuck? - I wonder what we use this thing for?
19Indirect language stimulation techniques
- Expansion
- Adult repeats the childs short sentences or
single-word utterances as an adult would have
said them. - Child says ball
- Adult says It is a ball.
- Child says doggy run
- Adult says Yes, the doggy is running.
- (Lets the child know you understood them and
that you were paying attention!)
20Indirect language stimulation techniques
- Expansion Plus
- Adult lengthens the childs short sentences or
single word utterances and adds a new bit of
information. - Child says ball
- Adult says It is a ball. Its a red ball
- (Lets child know you understood them and have
words to say more soon!)
21Indirect language stimulation techniques
- Repetition
- When child says something with speech sound
errors, the adult repeats the utterance with
correct sounds. - Child says wed wabbit
- Adult says red rabbit
- (Lets child hear correct sounds without being
corrected.)
22Use everything in the environment for language
learning
Pets! Anything that moves is interesting
Cooking! Snack time
23A word about vocabulary and ses.
- Average child from welfare family hears about 3
million words per year while average child from
professional family hears about 11 million words
per year. - By age 4 the gap is 13 to 45 million words heard!
- Child from professional family speaks more than
adult from welfare family - (Hart and Risley, 1995)
24Creating positive experiences involving print
- Start book play early.
- Earliest books need to
- Have good pictures of familiar things
- Not have page clutter
- Be durable!
- Be played-with every day (over and over and
over)
25Creating positive experiences involving print
- Lets see some in sequence.
- Single items on page with very familiar things
- Multiple pictures on the page but separated
- Touchy Feely
- Repetitive and predictable
- Rhyme
- Tag - Big brother reading to little brothers!
26(No Transcript)
27(No Transcript)
28Touchy Feely Books Adjectives
Repetitive Familiar things
29Familiar and connected And rhyming!
Repetitive and predictableandrhyming
30Children sharing books
- What is Morgan doing?
- What is Jordan doing?
- Can you tell what Cameron is doing?
31Tag (from Leap Frog) Morgan can read to his
brothers!
32Dialogic Reading the right way to do books
- First described by Whitehurst in 1988.
- Wonderful way to use books for
- Language growth
- Social connection
- Positive print experiences
33Dialogic Reading Little one takes the lead
- Dont worry about the baby not sitting still.
- Coming and going is really fine!
34Dialogic Reading Question types-CROWD
- C Completion questions (e.g., Baby bear said,
somebody's been sleeping in my bed and________!) - R Recall questions (e.g., Can you remember what
happened to baby bear's chair?) - O Open-ended questions (e.g., What is happening
in this picture?) - W Wh-questions (e.g., Who ate baby bear's
porridge?) - D Distancing questions to connect to world
knowledge (e.g., Have you ever been for a walk in
the woods? Tell me about your walk.)
35Dialogic Reading PEER
- P Prompt - Ask child to respond to the story
through using any of the CROWD questions. (e.g.,
Can you remember what happened to baby bear's
chair? Student answers It got broken.) - E Evaluate - Evaluate or affirm a childs
response. (e.g., That's right.) - E Expand Add information to the child's
response. (e.g., Goldilocks sat in it and it got
broken.) - R Repeat Ask the child to repeat your
expanded comment. (e.g., Can you say that?)
36Bed-time storiesGood Night Moon yet again!
- What things happen during these minutes?
37Thats Not My Tractor
38How about phonological awareness and then
phonemic awareness
- Thinking about words
- Words in phrases
- Words in sentences
- Thinking about syllables
- Compound words
- Two syllable words
- Thinking about sounds
- Rhyming words
- First sound in the word
39Powerful (and fun) Phonological Awareness Tool
- Goldsworthy, C.L. (1998). A Sourcebook of
Phonological Awareness Activities Childrens
Classic Literature
40Goldilocks and the Three Bears
- Word-level activities
- Counting words
- That chair is too soft.
- Identifying missing words
- forest, window, flowers / window flowers
- Identifying missing words in phrase/sentence
- Goldilocks woke up at once. / Goldilocks woke up
at __. - Supplying word
- She tasted the porridge in the big __.
- Rearranging words
- Girl little I sleepy am three Goldilocks and
bears the
41Goldilocks and the Three Bears
- Syllable-level activities (use pictures from the
story and print contexts) - Syllable counting
- Papa, nobody, porridge, chair, shiny, middle,
Goldilocks - Syllable deleting
- Say bedroom without bed say sleeping without
-ing - Syllable adding
- Add stairs to the end of up add est to the end
of for - Syllable reversing
- Add some to the end of body (bodysome) what do
you think the word was before we switched the
parts - Syllable substituting
- Say asleep. Instead of sleep, say cross (across)
42Goldilocks and the Three Bears
- Phoneme-level activities 25 different types of
activities - Beginning with sound matching (initial)
- Includes sound blending, recognizing and
producing rhyme - Identifying and matching sounds at the beginning,
middle, and end of words - Concludes with deleting sounds, pig Latin, and
phoneme switching.
43Report of the National Early Literacy Panel
(NELP) 200911 Skills and Abilities that Predict
Literacy Success
- alphabet knowledge (AK)
- knowledge of the names and sounds associated
with printed letters - phonological awareness (PA)
- the ability to detect, manipulate, or analyze
the auditory aspects of spoken language
(including the ability to distinguish or segment
words, syllables, or phonemes), independent of
meaning - rapid automatic naming (RAN) of letters or
digits - the ability to rapidly name a sequence of random
letters or digits
44Report of the National Early Literacy Panel
(NELP) 200911 Skills and Abilities that Predict
Literacy Success
- RAN of objects or colors
- the ability to rapidly name a sequence of
repeating random sets of pictures of objects
(e.g., car, tree, house, man) or colors - writing or writing name
- the ability to write letters in isolation on
request or to write ones own name - phonological memory
- the ability to remember spoken information for a
short period of time.
45Report of the National Early Literacy Panel
(NELP) 200911 Skills and Abilities that Predict
Literacy Success
- concepts about print
- knowledge of print conventions (e.g., leftright,
frontback) and concepts (book cover, author,
text) - print knowledge
- a combination of elements of AK, concepts about
print, and early decoding - .
46Report of the National Early Literacy Panel
(NELP) 200911 Skills and Abilities that Predict
Literacy Success
- reading readiness
- usually a combination of AK, concepts of print,
vocabulary, memory, and PA - oral language
- the ability to produce or comprehend spoken
language, including vocabulary and grammar - visual processing
- the ability to match or discriminate visually
presented symbols.
47Some awesome resources
48Preschool Early Literacy Assessment Tools
- Test of Preschool Early Literacy
- Authors Lonigan, Wagner, Torgesen Rashotte
- Publisher ProEd www.proedinc.com
- Ages 3 yrs to 5 yrs 11 mos.
- Assesses print knowledge, definitional
vocabulary, and phonological awareness - Provides standard scores to compare childs
performance to same-age peers
49Preschool Early Literacy Assessment Tools
- Individual Growth Development Indicators (IGDIs)
http//igdis.umn.edu - Picture naming, alliteration, rhyming
- Ages 3-5
- Can graph results and provides instructional
suggestions
50Get Ready to Read(www.GetReadytoRead.org)
- 20 question early literacy online screening test
- Literacy environment checklists
- Literacy activities and materials
- Print knowledge
- Emergent Writing
- Listening (phonological) awareness
51Read Together, Talk Together Kit A and Kit B
- Materials for dialogic reading!
- Kit A for 2-3 year-olds / Kit B for 4-5 year-olds
- Includes 20 picture books
- both fiction and nonfiction titles
- Teacher and Parent Notes for each book
- Program Handbook explaining the dialogic reading
technique - Teacher Training Video
- Parent Training Video
52Every Child Ready to Read Literacy Tips for
Parents (Lee Pesky Learning Center)
- Topics are individually tailored for three age
rangesinfant, toddler, and preschooland
include - read-aloud books to develop sound awareness
- perfect picture books for encouraging letter
knowledge - ways to promote verbal language and build
vocabulary - the benefits of symbolic play
- fun (and educational) games for car trips
- helping youngsters write at home
- Literacy gift ideas for kids
- warning signs of a learning disability
53Thank you!gibbsdenise_at_aol.com