Title: LINKING THE STRANDS OF LANGUAGE AND LITERACY
1LINKING THE STRANDS OF LANGUAGE AND LITERACY
- NSSLHA FEBRUARY 5, 2011
- CSU, Sacramento
- Candace Goldsworthy, Ph.D.
- Katie Lambert, M.S.
2LINKING THE STRANDS OF LANGUAGE AND LITERACY A
RESOURCE MANUAL (2010)
- CH 1 Overview
- CH 2 Play
- CH 3 Listening Skills
- CH 4 Rationale
- CH 5 How-tos
- CH 6 Activities Materials by Katie Lambert,
M.S.
3WHY I WROTE IT
- To simplify the murkiness that exists in the
multivarious strands and levels in a developing
oral-written language system - Myriad models, categories, labels
- Tons of language tests and materials available
- We become frustrated with where to begin and what
to do next
4THE ROLLER COASTER OF CHILD LANGUAGE THERAPY
- Ive worked on some receptive skills
- Should I add in some play?
- Seems like s/he needs some listening skills
work - S/he cant tell a story
- Yikes now its showing up in his/her reading
writing..of course b/c its a language continuum
5 BEGINNING OF SEMESTER in CHILD LANGUAGE CLINIC
- I HAVE NO IDEA WHAT THE HECK IM SUPPOSED TO BE
DOING IN CHILD LANGUAGE!
6END OF SEMESTER
- WOW THAT WAS FUN. I WISH I COULD DO IT AGAIN. IF
ONLY ID KNOWN THEN WHAT I KNOW NOW I WOULDNT
HAVE BEEN SO SCARED
7LAYERS OF LANGUAGE
- Seasoned new clinicians ask
- How do I know when to drop working on one
language strand and move to another? - When do I leave a strand such as listening
skills to work on narrative skills? - How do I add in reading written language?
- How do I bridge the gaps?
8 REASON FOR WRITING THE BOOK
- Love of child language-literacy
- For beginning clinicians to get you started and
to keep checking back in - For seasoned clinicians to check in, to stay on
track of where youve been and what possibilities
still need to be included
9 INTENT OF BOOK IS
- To provide a schema of good practicegrowing
sense toward expertise - You may enter as a beginning clinician and move
to a more advanced level and then to proficiency
and advanced proficiency - Continue to a level of automaticity
10 VISUALIZING CHILD LANGUAGE-LITERACY
- Dickinson/McCabe (1991) Process of language
acquisition can be thought of as being like a
French braid rather than as a sequential
processlanguage consists of multiple strands
phonology, semantics, syntax, discourse, reading,
and writingthat are picked up at various times
and woven in with the other strands to create a
beautiful whole.
11DEFINITION OF STRAND (Webster, 2002)
- Any one of the threads, fibers, wires, etc. that
are twisted together to form a length of string,
rope, or cable any of the individual bundles of
thread or fiber so twisted together any of the
parts that are bound together to form a whole
12LANGUAGE-LITERACY CONTINUUM
- Language-literacy continuum of strands
developing separately yet overlapping and
alongside each other - They merge onto a super highway of a fully
developed oral-written language system - STRANDS Play skills, listening skills, early
oral language and early written language merge
together - Problem-solving not separate strand but KL will
include today
13OVERVIEW
- Strands represent levels a child must pass
through to transition from early to later
language skills - Your client may start at a higher strand e.g.
reading and need to move back e.g. to
phonological awareness or vice versa
14LANGUAGE ACQUISITON IS FLUID
- We break language into discrete steps to teach
about it BUT the process is dynamic fluid - SCIENCE of understanding language acquisition
know discrete aspects of language phonology,
semantics, syntax, pragmatics - ART of understanding language acquisition know
when to back up a strand when to pick up the
next/higher language strand
15RX STRATEGIES
- VERTICAL APPROACH STRATEGY work on one goal at a
time e.g. work on one pronoun she - HORIZONTAL ATTACK STRATEGY working on more than
one goal at a time e.g. work on multiple
pronouns - (see McCauley/Fey, 2006)
- STRANDS APPROACH horizontal/ working on more
than one strand AND goal simultaneously
16ASSESSMENT TOOLS
- They can dictate what we select as therapy
targets - Assessment tools divide language up into what the
test author(s) believe(s) to be important to
examine
17ASSESSMENT TOOLS
- We need to widen our kaleidoscope to a bigger
picture - Examine impact oral language problem has on
reading/written language system e.g., DONt
target he she through oral language ONLY add
reading/writing
18HOW A STRANDS APPROACH WORKS IN CHILD LANGUAGE
- Cross modalities whenever possible work on oral
and written language - Implicit teaching introduce target through
play/books - Explicit teaching make target stand out and
drill a bit
19HOW STRANDS APPROACH WORKS
- Like Hodson Padens (1991) cycles approach in
phonological processes - Basic tenets focus on perception production
following a sequence of activities - In phono processes activities are auditory
bombardment, production practice, probes to check
stimulability, more auditory bombardment - Certain target phonemes represent target
phonological patterns
20HOW STRANDS APPROACH WORKS (continued)
- In phonological processes approach, e.g. /sp/ and
/st/ may be selected to represent target
phonological pattern of cluster reduction - A cycle is complete when all patterns, not all
sounds, have been treated but not necessarily
remediated - Patterns get recycled and mastery is not a
criterion for moving to next treatment target
21HOW STRANDS APPROACH WORKS (continued)
- For example language testing reveals child needs
help with prepositions and pronouns - Select REPRESENTATIVE PREPOSITIONS e.g. under
in next - Implicit teaching read Theres An Alligator
Under My Bed (Mayer 1971) There used to be an
alligator UNDER my bed. I put (food) IN the
garage. I put (food) NEXT to my bed. - Explicit teaching drill wheres the alligator?
Wheres the food? - Cross modalities print if appropriate
22HOW STRANDS APPROACH WORKS (continued)
- Select REPRESENTATIVE PRONOUNS e.g. her
she his - Implicit teaching read Blueberries for Sal
(McCloskey, 1948) Little Sal brought along HER
small tin pailand then SHE picked more
berriesLittle Bear came with HIS mother to eat
blueberries. - Explicit teaching drill Who brought her small
tin pail? Who did Little Bear come to the
mountain with to find blueberries? - Cross modalities print if appropriate
23HOW STRANDS APPROACH WORKS (continued)
- As in processes approach, dip the child into
prepositions or pronouns by selecting target
items to REPRESENT target language constructions - Open up the preposition/pronoun SLOT to increase
childs awareness that this slot exists and they
will begin to generalize. Soon they will be using
prepositions pronouns not explicitly
taught..theyll pick them up on their own
exposure to language models
24TAKE IT AWAY KATIE
- Started as a Masters project at CSUS
- Defined by SPA department as
- KL started with interest in child
language-literacy continuum - Evolved into Ch 6
- Evolved into CD