ERIC Identifier: ED459424
Publication Date: 2001-12-00
Author: Lin, Chia-Hui
Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Reading English and
Communication Bloomington IN.
Early Literacy Instruction: Research Applications in the Classrooms.
ERIC Digest.
THIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC, THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC
Research overwhelmingly reveals that the early childhood years are
the single most important period of time during which literacy
development occurs in a person's life (National Association for the
Education of Young Children, 1998; Slegers, 1996). However,
philosophical and methodological differences exist regarding how
best to instruct and encourage young children to read and write.
Teaching reading and writing to young children in American has
always been an area of controversy and debate (Teale & Yokota,
2000), and it remains so today. The purpose of this Digest is to
review various studies and to identify essential elements of
effective early literacy classroom instruction.
PHONICS AND
PHONEMIC AWARENESS
According to the National Institute for
Literacy (2001), phonemic awareness is the ability to think about
and work with individual sounds in spoken languages. Before children
learn to read, they need to be aware of how sounds work. Teachers
should integrate phonemic awareness instruction in the curriculum to
help children learn to read and spell. The instruction can start
with having children categorize the first phonemes-the smallest
functional unit of speech-in words and then progress to more
complicated combinations. According to the National Reading
Panel (2000) "Phonics skills must be integrated with the development
of phonemic awareness, fluency, and text reading comprehension
skills." Developing skill in blending and manipulating phonemes has
been found to permit many children to develop strong reading
abilities who were otherwise struggling. Phonemic awareness can
also be integrated into beginning writing instruction. While a child
writes, the teacher can name the letters or comment about the
strokes used to form the letters. When teachers take dictated
messages from children, such as when writing a thank-you letter to a
parent or guest, they can provide explicit demonstrations of phoneme
segmentation. Note, however, there is no need to postpone children's
functional writing until they all know the alphabet letters since
many children develop strong writing skills simply through exposure
to a print-rich environment (Schickedanz, 1998). Teachers should
provide flexible writing experiences that allow young children to
use scribble, random letters, or invented spelling in the beginning
and over time move to more conventional forms (NAEYC, 1998; Teale &
Yokota, 2000). When children write their own texts, they are also
developing their vocabulary and phonemic awareness (Slegers,
1996).
POSITIVE ADULT-CHILD RELATIONSHIPS
Young children's
literacy learning benefits greatly from adults who are responsive to
their interests and sensitive to their current level of language
development (Slegers, 1996). During the infant and toddler years,
children need many one-on-one interactions with caring adults to
support their oral literacy development. Parents can talk to very
young children and respond to their attempts to engage with simple
language and frequent eye-contacts. Young children also need
teachers to play with, talk with, sing to, and with whom to do
finger plays and other learning games. In preschool, children need
positive and nurturing relationships with teachers who can model
reading and writing behaviors, engage in responsive conversations,
and foster their interests in learning to read and write (NAEYC,
1998; Teale & Yokota, 2000). A PRINT-RICH ENVIRONMENT
Children
need materials to support their literacy development. When children
have ready access to writing tools with which to express themselves
in symbolic ways, they are motivated to learn and use literacy.
Books, papers, writing tools, and functional signs should be visible
everywhere in the classroom so that children can see and use
literacy for multiple purposes. Children also engage in more reading
and writing activities in print-rich environments (Slegers, 1996).
For toddlers, teachers can provide simple art materials such as
crayons, markers or papers for them to explore and manipulate. For
preschoolers, teachers can draw children's attention to specific
letters and words in the environment whenever it is appropriate.
Besides accessible writing tools, children also need time to explore
literacy. In the free-choice time period, children can engage in
literacy-related play by sharing and sending messages to friends in
a writing center. Creating menus for a restaurant, writing grocery
lists, or making invitations to classroom events are examples of
activities that can help children understand what readers and
writers do before they actually acquire the skills necessary to read
and write (NAEYC, 1998; Neuman, 1998; Teale & Yokota, 2000). When
literacy is an integral part of their daily activities, children
actively construct their own literacy knowledge and strategies and
learn to read and write naturally and playfully (Teale & Yokota,
2000). INTEGRATED LANGUAGE EXPLORATIONS IN THE CURRICULUM
The
early childhood curriculum should be intellectually engaging and
challenging in a way that expands children's knowledge of the world
and vocabulary. Investigating real topics or events that are
meaningful to children should be a primary feature of the
curriculum. When children investigate, they have opportunities to
ask questions and use their literacy skills to explore their worlds.
Teachers can establish time each day for students to present their
thoughts in symbolic ways. Children can also work in small groups
with peers having different skills so they can learn from each
other. Most young children are eager to learn literacy when they
discover that it is useful for exploring the environment and for
communicating with others (NAEYC, 1998; Neuman, 1998). READING AND
WRITING ACTIVITIES
Listening to stories and discussing them are
very important activities in early childhood classrooms (Slegers,
1996). For very young children, who normally have very short
attention spans, story times work best when they are short (about
5-10 minutes) and conversational. Teachers can share cardboard
books, nursery rhymes, books with photographs or drawings of
animals, people, and brightly colored objects. Through these
activities, children learn to focus their attention on words and
pictures (Neuman & Bredekamp, 2000). In preschool, children need
daily exposure to high quality books. Teachers can read books daily
to individual children or to small groups of children; these
readings should be from books that positively reflect children's
identity, home language, and culture. In kindergarten and the
primary grades, children also need to experience and engage in
stories and informational texts daily. These activities foster
children's vocabulary learning and comprehension skills (NAEYC,
1998; Neuman & Bredekamp, 2000; Teale & Yokota, 2000). When
reading to students of all ages, teachers should speak with
inflection in order to convey meanings. Teachers may either stop and
ask questions when they read the books or they can read an entire
passage at once, thereby permitting students to enjoy the language
and the rhythm of the book (Neuman, 1998). After readings, there
should be opportunities for children to talk about what was read and
to focus on the sounds and parts of language as well as the meaning
of the book (NAEYC, 1998). Student response cards and group
discussions followed by the retelling of a story using pictures or
actual objects are effective devices for engaging students and
enhancing their understanding of the stories they have read (Neuman,
1998). Background and contextual information regarding the
literature being read is also useful for students' comprehension,
vocabulary building and decoding. This can be provided through field
trips, experiments, videos, or guest speakers (NAEYC, 1998;
Schickedanz, 1998).
Students not only need to listen to books,
they also need to have chances to read independently. Library
corners need to be in the central part of the classroom with
comfortable furniture that encourages children to read by
themselves. Varying levels and varieties of reading materials, such
as novels, biographies, informational books, magazines, and
newspaper articles should be provided to broaden children's reading
experiences. Good lighting and lively displays of readily accessible
arrangements of books encourage children to stay in the
library (Neuman & Bredekamp, 2000). Many teachers like to encourage
children to do book talks about the materials they are reading,
finding that this method significantly promotes conversations and
reading interests among the children. Opportunities for children to
read to audiences, including peers, parents, or even stuffed animals
should be provided since this has been found to increase reading
accuracy and fluency. Reading can also be a regular part of
children's out-of-school time so that parents can be involved in
supporting children's reading habits at home. When children have
opportunities to experience various types of literature such as
stories, informational texts, and poems, to respond to them through
art, music, or dramatic activities, and to learn from lessons about
comprehension strategies such as predicting and drawing inferences,
they become more capable in processing written language and more
familiar with language patterns and vocabulary (Neuman, 1998;
Teale & Yokota, 2000).
VARY TEACHING STRATEGIES ACCORDING TO
CHILDREN'S NEEDS
In literacy-rich classrooms, some children are
able to learn the skills and strategies necessary for reading and
writing through engagement in meaningful activities. Finger plays,
songs, poems, games, chants, and book listening and discussion all
help children to pick up new vocabularies, understand the
similarities and differences in language, and develop phonemic
awareness (NAEYC, 1998; Neuman, 1998). However, it is important for
teachers to adjust teaching strategies according to children's
needs. Some children need explicit, direct instruction in order to
master the task, and teachers must try to achieve balance between
meaningful activities and skill practices (NAEYC, 1998; Neuman,
1998; Schickedanz, 1998; Teale & Yokota, 2000). Children may need to
see or hear the alphabetic letters isolated from the context in
order to better capture their shape and form (Neuman, 1998). If a
child fails to make expected progress in literacy learning or if
their literacy skills are advanced, teachers also need to prepare
more individualized instructional strategies to meet the child's
needs (NAEYC, 1998)
CONCLUSION
Learning to read and write is a
critical achievement in life. Research reveals conclusively the link
between early literacy and later academic and career success. To
ensure that every child becomes a competent reader and writer is a
responsibility shared by teachers, families and communities. The
role of educators in early literacy instruction is to teach basic
skills and to provide rich, meaningful, engaging learning
environments supported by appropriate teaching practices. Each child
comes to the classroom with different literacy experiences and
abilities, and teachers need to consider each child's needs and to
provide balanced programs with explicit instruction and meaningful
reading and writing tasks (Slegers, 1996). When children are
encouraged to learn independently, and when teachers, parents and
communities work together to build optimal environments for that
learning, children's success in reading and writing can be
expected (NAEYC, 1998; Neuman, 1998; Schickedanz,
1998). REFERENCES
National Association for the Education of
Young Children. (1998).A joint position statement by NAEYC &
International Reading Assoc.: Learning to read and write:
Developmentally appropriate practices for young children. Young
Children, 53(4), 30-46. National Institute for Literacy. (2001).
Put reading first: The research building blocks for teaching
children to read: Kindergarten through grade 3. Washington, DC:
Author.
National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development (2000). Report of the National Reading Panel. Teaching
Children to Read: An Evidence-Based Assessment of the Scientific
Research Literature on Reading and Its Implications for Reading
Instruction [Online]. Available:
http://www.nichd.nih.gov/publications/nrp/smallbook.htm
Neuman, S.
B. (1998). How can we enable all children to achieve? In S. B.
Neuman & K. A. Roskos (Eds.), Children achieving: Best practices in
early literacy (pp. 18-32). Newark, DE: International Reading
Association.
Neuman, S. B., & Bredekamp, S. (2000). Becoming a
reader: A developmentally appropriate approach. In D. S.
Strickland & L. M. Morrow (Eds.), Beginning reading and writing.
Language and literacy series (pp. 22-44). Newark, DE: International
Reading Association.
Schickedanz, J. A. (1998). What is
developmentally appropriate practice in early literacy? Consider the
alphabet. In S. B. Neuman & K. A. Roskos (Eds.), Children achieving:
Best practices in early literacy (pp. 20-37). Newark, DE:
International Reading Association.
Slegers, B. (1996). A review of
the research and literature on emergent literacy. Urbana-Champaign,
IL: ERIC Clearinghouse on Elementary and Early Childhood
Education. (ERIC Document Reproduction Service No. ED 397
959)
Teale, W., & Yokota, J. (2000). Beginning reading and
writing: Perspectives on instruction. In D. S. Strickland & L. M.
Morrow (Eds.), Beginning reading and writing. Language and literacy
series (pp. 3-21). Newark, DE: International Reading
Association.
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Digest #166 is EDO-CS-01-07 and was published
in December 2001 by the ERIC Clearinghouse on Reading, English &
Communication, 2805 E 10th St., Bloomington, IN 47408-2698,
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Title: Early Literacy Instruction: Research Applications in the Classrooms.
ERIC Digest.
Note: ERIC/REC Digest number D166.
Document Type: Information Analyses---ERIC Information Analysis Products (IAPs) (071); Information Analyses---ERIC Digests (Selected) in Full Text (073);
Available From: ERIC Clearinghouse on Reading, English, and Communication, Indiana
University, 2805 E. 10th Street, Suite 140, Bloomington, IN
47408-2698. Tel: 800-759-4723 (Toll Free); Web site:
http://eric.indiana.edu.
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Class Activities, Classroom Environment, Early
Childhood Education, Emergent Literacy, Instructional
Effectiveness, Teacher Role, Theory Practice Relationship
Identifiers: Adult Child Relationship, ERIC Digests, Phonemic Awareness
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