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Language and Literacy

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Understanding and telling stories, describing things that. are important is the child's life. ... routines such as bathing and bedtime. Lift the flab books. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Language and Literacy


1
Language and Literacy
  • Debbie King
  • Willamette Education Service District

2
Todays Agenda
  • What is early literacy?
  • What early literacy is not
  • Language and literacy
  • Stages of early literacy and language
  • Developmental activities for literacy
  • Practice!

3
What is early literacy
  • Your childs early experiences with books and
    language lay the foundation for success in
    learning to read.
  • Children prepare to read long before they enter
    school.
  • Early literacy is a baby who chews on a book.
  • Early literacy is a toddler who wants his
    favorite book over and over.
  • Early literacy is a preschooler who reads the
    story to you from memory.

4
  • There are many pathways to literacy. Early
    experiences can be initiated by the child or by
    other people.
  • It can be playful or work like.
  • May take place in the home, the neighborhood,
    preschool, or daycare center.
  • Early literacy experiences can include pretending
    to write and read stories, writing a thank-you
    note to grandma, or listening to a story.

5
  • The most important thing that YOU can do to
    foster early literacy is to provide an atmosphere
    that is
  • Fun
  • Verbal
  • Stimulating

6
You Are The Key To a childs success In
learning to read
7
What Early Literacy is Not
  • It is not formal teaching of reading to younger
    children.
  • Formal instruction that pushes infants and
    toddlers to read is not developmentally
    appropriate.

8
How early literacy relates to language development
  • Learning to read is built on a foundation of
    language skills that children start learning at
    birth.
  • Understanding what is said
  • Imitating what they hear
  • Using more and more words as they develop
  • Using their language to express their thoughts
  • Using their language to get their needs and wants
    met
  • Connecting letter sounds to words

9
Statistics
  • According to a 2006 kindergarten teacher survey
    by ODE, 19.4 of children enrolled in Multnomah
    County were not ready to succeed because they
    lacked the necessary language and pre-reading
    skills. Nationally, this rises to 35.
  • There is a 90 probability that a child who is a
    poor reader in the first grade will be a poor
    reader in the 4th grade.

10
Statistics contd
  • The nations report card of 2003, stated that 40
    of 4th graders and 31 of 8th graders are below
    the basic skills level.
  • Children develop much of their capacity for
    learning in the first 3 years of life, when their
    brain grows to 90 of the eventual adult weight.
  • The prevalence and stability of preschool
    problems of inattention, hyperactivity, and
    impulsivity suggests a number of links to a lack
    early literacy .

11
Statistics contd
  • Almost 3 million school age children have some
    form of learning disability and receive special
    education in school.
  • Children with developmental speech/language
    impairments are at a higher rate for reading
    disability that typical peers with no history of
    speech/language impairment.

12
Stages of Development
Literacy Skills
13
5 Components of Emergent Language
  • Symbolic Development / Print Motivation
  • A childs interest in and enjoyment of books.
  • Spoken Language / Vocabulary
  • Using language to communicate ideas, feelings,
    and to
  • ask questions in order to solve problems.
    Learning the
  • names of things.

14
Components contd
  • Listening and Understanding Language / Narrative
    Skills
  • Understanding and telling stories, describing
    things that
  • are important is the childs life. This helps
    them to
  • understand what they are learning to read.
  • Knowledge and Awareness of Print and Books /
    Written Language
  • The child is learning that writing has basic
    rules.
  • Learning the alphabet letters names.

15
Components contd
  • Sounds of Language / Phonological Awareness
  • The ability to hear and manipulate the smaller
    sounds
  • in words. This includes rhymes, chunking sounds
    of
  • words, putting two chunks of sounds together to
    make a word.

16
What Children Like in Books
  • Birth-2
  • Board books with photos of babies
  • Books with clear familiar items in the babys
    world
  • Books with texture
  • Books with animals sounds

17
  • 2 3 Years of Age
  • Small books that fill into small hands and has
    thick pages.
  • Books with simple rhymes.
  • Books with familiar routines such as bathing and
    bedtime.
  • Lift the flab books.
  • Books that they can learn by heart because they
    have few words.

18
  • 4 5 Years of Age
  • Books that tell stories.
  • Books that make them laugh.
  • Books they can memorize.
  • Books about familiar real world trucks, going to
    school, dinosaurs.
  • Counting books, alphabet books, vocabulary books.

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