Title: Negotiating the Tension between DAP
1Negotiating the Tension between DAP
Skills-Based Instruction in Kindergarten
- Sister Mary Karen Oudeans, Ph.D.
- Silver Lake College, Manitowoc, WI
- Ben Ditkowsky, Ph.D.
- Educational Consultant, Chicago, IL
2What is Developmentally Appropriate Practices
(DAP)?
- DAP is based on the assumptions that children can
develop without specific intervention and that to
provide specific intervention may, in fact, be
detrimental to development. - DAP is based on the conviction that
- Early educational experiences and environments
are important. - Classroom practices following DAP guidelines
enhance childrens development and facilitate
learning. - Superior academic benefits result from DAP
practices
3A few DAP Research Citations
- Bredekamp Rosegrant, 1992
- Bredekamp Copple, 1997
- Carta, Atwater, Schwartz, McConnell, 1993
- Dunn, Beach, Kontos, 1994
- Hyson, Hirsh-Pasek, Rescola, 1990
- Kostelnik, 1992
- Sherman, Mueller, 1996
- Stipek, Feiler, Daniels, Milburn, 1995
4DAP Principles
- Age appropriateness and individualization
- Student readiness
- Teaching in the Zone of Proximal Development
- Integration of curriculum assessment
- Importance of active engagement
- c. f. Carta, Atwater,
Schwartz, McConnell, 1993
5Misinterpretations of DAP
- DAP does not mean teachers dont teach and the
children control the classroom. - Classrooms where teachers abdicate responsibility
for instruction are NOT developmentally
appropriate. - Good (DAP) early childhood programs are,
- Highly organized and
- Highly structured environments
- Where teachers have carefully prepared
- Where teachers are in control
(e. g. Bredekamp Rosegrant, 1992 Kostelnik,
1992)
6Statements of NAEYC IRA regarding Reading DAP
(1998)
- Learning to read and write is a complex,
multifaceted process that requires a wide variety
of instructional approaches. - A DAP model of literacy learning and development
is an interactive process.
7Statements of NYEAC IRA regarding DAP
- Believes that--
- Goals and expectations for young childrens
achievement in reading and writing should be
developmentally appropriate, that is, challenging
but achievable, with sufficient adult support.
8NAEYC Expectations for Teachers
- Early Childhood Teachers need to understand and
be skilled in - The developmental continuum of reading writing
- A variety of strategies to assess and support
individual children. - Setting appropriate literacy goals
- Adapting instructional strategies
9NAEYC Expects Teachers to
- Frequently read interesting and conceptually rich
stories to children - Provide daily opportunities for children to write
- Help children build a sight vocabulary
- Create a literacy-rich environment for children
to engage independently in reading writing
10NAEYC Goal for Kindergarten
- Children develop basic concepts of print and
begin to engage in and experiment with reading
and writing
11Some Key Early Reading Syntheses
- Adams. M. J. (1990). Beginning to read Thinking
and learning about print. Cambridge,MA The MIT
Press. - Snow, C. E., Burns, M. S., Griffin, P. (Eds.).
(1998). Preventing reading difficulties in young
children.Washington, DC National Academy Press. - National Reading Panel. (2000). Teaching children
to read An evidence-based assessment of the
scientific research literature on reading and its
implications for reading instruction Reports of
the subgroups. Bethesda, MD National Institute
of Child Health and Human Development. Also
available on the internet - http//www.nichd.nih.gov/publications/nrp/smallboo
k.htm
12What We Know From This Research
- Children who are at risk of reading disability
can be identified as early as kindergarten
(Torgesen, Wagner, Rashotte, Alexander, Conway,
1997), and early intervention is the key. - Kindergarten teachers have a brief window to
intervene to prevent an escalating pattern of
failure. - Overall, to change outcomes, we must provide the
highest quality instruction available as early as
possible. - The critical time for instruction Kindergarten!
13Kindergarten Instructional Targets
- Phonological Awareness.
- The awareness and understanding of the sound
structure of our language, that cat is composed
of the sounds /k/ /a/ /t/. - Alphabetic Principle. Based on two parts
- Alphabetic Understanding. Words are composed of
letters that represent sounds, and - Phonological Recoding. Systematically identifying
a letter sound and blending the sounds together
to retrieve the pronunciation of an unknown
printed string or to spell. - Automaticity Fluency
- The ability to translate letters-to-sounds-to-word
s fluently and effortlessly
14What should kids be able to DO by the end of
kindergarten that is most predictive of Success
in Reading.
- 1. Blending
- Orally blend
- onset-rime (m - ilk)
- 2 - 3 separately spoken phonemes into one
syllable words. (m-e me . f - u - n fun.) - 2. Segmentation
- Identify the first sound in a 1 syllable word (
bug begins with the sound /b/) - Say the individual sounds in 2 to 3 phoneme 1
syllable words (/c/ /a/ /t/)
15Teaching BIG Ideas in Alphabetic Understanding
in kindergarten
- Teach letter sound blending, segmenting
- Scaffold the Instruction
- read and practice
- first in isolation...
- then in words...
- then in connected text
- begin with most common, high frequency sounds and
words - teach one item at a time with intensive practice,
... then continue cumulative and distributed
practice daily
16What should kids be able to DO by the end of
kindergarten?
- Letter - Sound correspondence
- Identify letters by sound
- Say the most common sound for letters
- Decoding
- Blend sounds of letters to READ short words
- Sight-word reading
- Recognize common sight words
- (e.g. a, I, is, the, my you, of, are)
17Alphabetic Understanding Research Conclusions
- Letter-sound knowledge
- is prerequisite to effective word identification.
The primary difference between good and poor
readers is the ability to use letter-sound
correspondence to identify words. - Students who acquire and apply alphabetic
understanding early in their reading careers reap
long-term benefits. - Teaching students to listen, remember, and
process the letter-sound correspondence in words
is a difficult, demanding, yet achievable goal
with long lasting effects.
18Alphabetic Understanding Research Conclusions
- Combining instruction in phonological awareness
and letter-sounds appears to be the most
favorable for successful early reading. - A whole word strategy, by itself, has limited
utility in an orthography based on an alphabet. - Awareness of the relation between sounds and
their corresponding printed letter can be taught.
19So-- The pressure is on!
- Kindergarten outcomes contribute substantially to
first grade reading outcomes. - By focusing on early literacy skills and
attaining established phonological awareness in
kindergarten, the likelihood of successful
reading outcomes increases. - For students with a deficit in phonological
awareness in kindergarten, reading difficulty and
reading failure are likely - unless skills are
remediated early.
20We know from previous research
- It is critical for kindergarten reading
instruction to make explicit the connections
between print and the sounds of spoken language. - How we teach the two component skills of
letter-sounds and phonological blending and
segmenting is as important to childrens progress
in becoming readers as what we teach.
21Key Questions
- If traditional DAP kindergarten teachers
implement a structured, teacher-directed set of
instructional lessons will students meet key
instructional benchmarks? - If kids are successful, will teachers buy into
the more structured approach? - Will the size of the group make a difference
- whole group instruction (13 15 children),
- small group, (6 or fewer children)
22Teacher Participants
- Teachers self-selected to participate
- 2 teachers in same district
- 1 teacher from K-5 school in neighboring district
- 1 teacher volunteered as Control.
- She allowed us to assess her students but felt
her children were learning what was necessary to
meet kindergarten benchmarks.
23School A
- Intervention group (Whole class instruction)
- N 39 children am / pm Kindergarten (2 teachers)
- 15 minutes of explicit instructional lessons
along with early literacy DAP instruction - Control group (Traditional Kindergarten)
- N 26 children in am. / pm (1 teacher)
- Used early literacy program based on DAP
guidelines
24School B
- Intervention group (small group instruction)
- 22 children in am / pm kindergarten (2 teachers)
- 15 minutes of explicit instructional lessons
along with early literacy DAP instruction - (5 to 6 children in each group)
Difference from School A Children divided into 2
groups, 6 children each. 15-minute lessons taught
by classroom teacher Title 1 teacher.
25Teachers Philosophy Statements
- I think children learn best by exploring
experiencing many different things in our
curriculum, My role should be to set up the
activities so the children learn by doing. - My jobis to take each child from the level they
are at when they come into kindergarten and help
them reach their highest potential. - My philosophy generally is to accept children at
their current point in development progress
them according to their ability.
26Teachers Philosophy Statements
- My job is to develop the childs natural
curiosity and desire to learn through the
provision of meaningful, interesting age
appropriate experiences. - I believe children learn best through meaningful
hands on experiences which allow them to interact
with objects, materials, and people in their
environment. - The role of the teacher is to systematically
model, teach, and design learning situations in
which the students learn concepts, skills, and
ideas, using a variety of waysthrough explicit,
implicit, actual hands on experiential
instruction. The method of delivery depends on
the students and how they learn best.
27Types of Literacy Activities in DAP Classrooms
- Memorizing letter names sounds
- Rhyming games
- 6-trait writing lessons
- Phonemic awareness activities that stress variety
of skills - Phonics lessons focusing on individual letters
sounds and how to blend them - Shared reading writing experiences
- Independent writing experiences based on real
life experiences
28Assessment Targets and Age Range
Initial Sound
- Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills
(DIBELS) were developed by Good and Associates at
the University of Oregon to measure and monitor
student outcomes of key instructional targets in
beginning reading.
29Assessment Targetsand Age Range
Initial Sound
Initial Sound Fluency measures a childs ability
to say the initial sound of a spoken word
30Assessment Targets and Age Range
Initial Sound
Phonemic Segmentation Fluency measures a childs
ability to say all of the sounds in a spoken
word
31Assessment Targets and Age Range
Initial Sound
Nonsense Word Fluency measures a childs ability
to say the sounds in or read make-believe
words
32Initial Sound Fluency (ISF)
33Initial Sound Fluency
34Initial Sound Fluency
35Initial Sound Fluency
36Initial Sound Fluency
37Initial Sound Fluency
38Initial Sound Fluency
- We can see that intervention makes a difference
for ISF. - But ISF is not a goal in and of itself.
39Initial Sound Fluency and Phoneme Segmentation
Fluency
40Initial Sound Fluency
- ISF corresponds with PSF
- In general
- Children who scored higher in ISF scored higher
in PSF as well. - Children who scored lower in ISF scored lower in
PSF as well.
41Phonemic Segmentation Fluency (PSF)
42Phonemic Segmentation Fluency (PSF)
43Phonemic Segmentation Fluency (PSF)
44Phonemic Segmentation Fluency (PSF)
45Phonemic Segmentation Fluency (PSF)
46Phonemic Segmentation Fluency (PSF)
47Phonemic Segmentation Fluency (PSF)
- We can see that intervention makes a difference
for PSF. - But PSF is not a goal in and of itself.
48Phonemic Segmentation Fluency and Nonsense Word
Fluency (NWF)
49Phonemic Segmentation Fluency and Nonsense Word
Fluency
- PSF corresponds with NWF
- In general
- Children who scored higher in PSF scored higher
in NWF as well. - Children who scored lower in PSF scored lower in
NWF as well.
50Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF)
51Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF)
52Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF)
53Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF)
54Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF)
55Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF)
56Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF)
57Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF)
- We can see that intervention makes a difference
for NWF. - But is NWF measuring how well kids can decode
real words ?
58Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF)
59Word Reading Generalization
60Word Reading Generalization
- How many untrained words should a kindergarten
student read in a minute? - The DAP answer is
- As many as they can.
- How many words can they read?
61Word Reading Generalization
Using a structured program does not look like it
is detrimental to academic development in fact,
it appears to facilitate early reading ability!
62What does this mean for individual Children?
- Remember DAP Guidelines for teaching
- Age appropriateness and individualization
- Student readiness
- Teaching in the Zone of Proximal Development
- Integration of curriculum assessment
- Importance of active engagement
63Based on ISF in October of Kindergarten we
predicted these students in the DAP classroom
would not be able to read
Control Group Typical predicted non - readers
(based on ISF)
60
50
40
Phonemes per minute
30
20
10
0
0PSF
1PSF
2PSF
3PSF
4PSF
Session For PSF Assessment
64and in May, (Children with Low ISF in October)
couldnt read words likemop, him, run
65Based on ISF in October of Kindergarten we
predicted these students in the DAP classroom
would be able to read
Control Group Typical predicted readers (based
on ISF)
60
50
40
Phonemes per minute
30
20
10
0
0PSF
1PSF
2PSF
3PSF
4PSF
Session For PSF Assessment
66And in May, they read an average of about 4 or 5
words per minute.
Control Group Typical predicted readers (based
on ISF)
60
Wd Rdg Gen
50
25
24
23
22
21
40
20
19
18
17
16
15
Words read per minute
Phonemes per minute
14
30
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
20
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
10
1
2
Student
0
0PSF
1PSF
2PSF
3PSF
4PSF
Session For PSF Assessment
67Based on ISF in October of Kindergarten we
predicted these students in the DAP classroom
would be able to read
Control Group Typical predicted readers (based
on ISF)
60
50
40
Phonemes per minute
30
20
10
0
0PSF
1PSF
2PSF
3PSF
4PSF
Session For PSF Assessment
68Does DAP meet individuals at the Zone of Proximal
Development?
Control Group Typical predicted readers (based
on ISF)
60
Wd Rdg Gen
They had the skill in segmentation
50
25
24
23
22
21
40
20
19
18
17
16
They could not read, even though they were
ready to read!
15
Words read per minute
Phonemes per minute
14
30
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
20
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
10
1
2
Student
0
0PSF
1PSF
2PSF
3PSF
4PSF
Session For PSF Assessment
69Based on ISF in October of Kindergarten we
predicted these students in the WHOLE CLASS
Intervention Classroom would NOT be able to read
70CAN whole group instruction meet kids at the Zone
of Proximal Development?
71Based on ISF in October of Kindergarten we
predicted these students in the WHOLE CLASS
Intervention Classroom would be able to read
72Based on ISF in October of Kindergarten we
predicted these students in the Small Group
Intervention Classroom would NOT be able to read
- 3 of 4 children made it to criterion levels on PSF
73(No Transcript)
74Can small group instruction meet children at the
ZPD?
75October ISF predicted reading and
76Basic Components of Lesson Sequence
- Activity 1 Letter Names and Sounds
- Sequence a, m, t, s, i, f, d, r, o, p, n, l, c,
b, u, g, h, x, e, v, j, w, k, y, z, q - The more useful letters are introduced first.
- The most common sound is taught
- Letter names and sounds are introduced
simultaneously. The name of this letter is __.
The sound for this letter is /----/.
77Basic Components of Lesson Sequence
- Activity 2 Phonemic Blending Segmenting
- auditory blending and segmenting
- separate activities within the same lesson
- combined after children are able to segment words
correctly into individual sounds - 4 - 6 words are used in each instructional cycle.
- Words contain sounds that were taught previously
or will be taught in the following cycle (e.g.,
am, mat, sam)
78Basic Components of Lesson Sequence
- Activity 3 Strategic Integration
- only words that children have been taught to
blend and segment in earlier cycles. - a blank tiles represent a phoneme when the
letter name and sound is first introduced. - manipulative letters are used after the letter
name and sound are taught reviewed. - Word Cards replace letter cards.
79Instructional Design Features
- Carefully sequenced examples, practice,
corrective feedback, and review - Clear, unambiguous strategies for teaching
phonological blending segmenting skills, letter
names sounds - Clear, unambiguous strategies for making explicit
connections between the sounds in words and
letters in words
80Answers and Directions
- If traditional DAP kindergarten teachers
implement a structured, teacher-directed set of
instructional lessons will students meet key
instructional benchmarks? - Yes
- But teacher effectiveness depends on teacher
knowledge and skill.
81 Answers and Directions
- If kids are successful, will teachers buy into
the more structured approach? - Not necessarily, even when presented with
increased student performance teacher reports
vary. - T1 It is hard for me to follow a set list of
wordsExplicit instruction is necessary but 15
minutes is too much will not repeat the
program - T2 I will use parts but not on a continuous
basis - T3 At first the children did not like reading
hard for them to concentrate it taught
them a system to use when reading as they
learned to read their attitude changed toward
the program
82Answers and Directions
- Will the size of the group make a difference
- whole group instruction (13 15 children),
- small group, (6 or fewer children)
- Yes, statistically and educationally significant
differences on multiple indicators.
83No Child Left Behind Education Act 2001
- Commitment to every child can read by the end of
third grade - Focus is on scientifically based early reading
interventions and achieving results for all
children - Schools, districts that fail to make adequate
yearly progress toward statewide proficiency
goals subject to improvement, corrective action
plans to get them back on course. - Key wordsprevention, early identification, and
early intervention
84Implications for instruction
- Balance can work
- Structured, carefully sequenced instruction in
key target areas results in higher gains, than
attempts to catch kids at their individual ZPD
with DAP instruction alone. - Use connected, decodable text facilitates early
word reading. - Print rich environments, and interesting stories
to can facilitate the development of oral
language and comprehension.