Early Literacy in Infants and Toddlers Department of Health and Welfare March 19, 2013 Sponsored by:...
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Transcript of Early Literacy in Infants and Toddlers Department of Health and Welfare March 19, 2013 Sponsored by:...
Early Literacy in Infants and Toddlers
Department of Health and WelfareMarch 19, 2013
Sponsored by:Idaho Commission for Libraries
325 W. State StreetBoise, ID 83702
Who we are…
The Idaho Commission for Libraries assists libraries to build the capacity to
better serve their clientele.
Our vision is for all parents and caregivers to nurture their
children’s early literacy skills, and for all children to develop as
independent readers and become lifelong learners.
Libraries.idaho.gov/read-to-me-resources
Outcomes
Be aware of current research relating to early literacy, vocabulary development, and access to print materials
Be able to share talking points with parents about the importance of early literacy
Be able to model six early literacy skills children must develop in order to become successful readers
Learn about free resources available from ICfL and local libraries to help support development of early literacy skills
As a result of our presentation today, we hope you will:
Agenda
• What is early literacy?• Modeling Six Early Literacy Skills• @ your library• Books to Go• Electronic Resources• Q and A
“EARLY LITERACY”
What children know about reading and
writing before they learn
to read and write.
In IdahoFamily poverty is significantly associated with lower
reading achievement scores for children, and Idaho has a high percentage of families living in poverty.
In 2011, over 55% of infants born in Idaho received Women Infant Children (WIC) services. (Idaho Division of Public Health, Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics)
In 2011, over 55% of infants born in Idaho received Women Infant Children (WIC) services. (Idaho Division of Public Health, Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics)
In Idaho
• Idaho Reading Indicator scores in 2011 show that 19% of children entering Kindergarten did not recognize three or more letters of the alphabet. Another 25% recognized fewer than 11 letters.
• Idaho Reading Indicator scores in 2011 show that 26% of low-income children entering kindergarten (those receiving free or reduced lunch rates) did not recognize three or more letters. Another 28% recognized fewer than 11 letters.
Some key findings…
The development of early literacy skills in a child’s life can better prepare that child for success in reading when he or she enters school.
Children who do not have early literacy experiences before they begin school start behind and tend to stay behind (the Matthew Effect).
Children who are not reading on grade level by the end of first grade have a 1 in 8 chance of catching up without costly direct intervention.
ImplicationsReading scores have important implications for later achievement. Basic readers are more than twice as likely as proficient readers to fail to graduate from high school. Below basic readers are almost
six times as likely to fail to graduate.
Only 33% of Idaho’s fourth graders scored proficient or higher on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP); 36% scored at the basic level and 31% below basic.
Only 33% of Idaho’s fourth graders scored proficient or higher on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP); 36% scored at the basic level and 31% below basic.
The most successful way to improve the
reading achievement of low-income
children is to increase their access to print.
ACCESS TO PRINT MATERIALS
Access to Print Materials
• increases in the amount of reading children do
• increases in children’s emergent literacy skills
• improvements in children’s reading achievement
There is a causal role between increased access to materials and-
WORKING WITH PARENTS
Here are some Talking Points to share with the families with whom you are working/ visiting…
Why is it important for children to get ready to read before they start school?
Children who start kindergarten with good pre-reading skills have an advantage.
They are ready to learn to read.
Why are parents so important in helping their children get ready to read?
You are your child’s first teacher.
You know your child best.
Children learn best by doing, and they love doing things with you.
To become successful readers, children need to:
What do children need to learn to become good readers?
• Learn a code
• Understand its meaning
Aa Bb Cc Dd Ee Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj Kk Ll Mm
< / * # > + \ ** [ = ) ] ~
Nn Oo Pp Qq Rr Ss Tt Uu Vv Ww Xx Yy Zz
: ]] { ++ } // ^ ! [[ (( >> \\ |
Aa Bb Cc Dd Ee Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj Kk Ll Mm
< / * # > + \ ** [ = ) ] ~
Nn Oo Pp Qq Rr Ss Tt Uu Vv Ww Xx Yy Zz
: ]] { ++ } // ^ ! [[ (( >> \\ |
[ *<: }><#.[ *<: }><#.
Reading is learning the code.
Reading is more than decoding words. Good readers understand the meaning of
what they read.
Reading is understanding the meaning.
Meg is hipple when she roffs with her mom.
What do children need to know before they can learn to read?
What is decoding?• Noticing print• Knowing letter names and sounds• Hearing the sounds that make up words
What do children need to know before they can learn to read?
What is comprehension?• Knowing what words mean (vocabulary)• Understanding the meaning of printed language
Five simple practices help children get ready to read:
Help your child be ready to read with simple activities every day.
Use the language you know best.
Use the language you know best to help your child get ready to read.
A foundation for reading…
The Six Early Literacy SkillsThe Six Early Literacy Skills
The Six Early Literacy Skills
The joy of, and interest in, reading books
PRINT MOTIVATION
Keeping reading FUN and sharing books is important. If the experience is not a positive one, children will relate reading to something negative, which will make them less likely to choose to read.
Print MotivationModel fun of reading and of playing with
language-- enjoy book and interaction yourself
Begin reading books early—even when baby is a newborn.
Make sure you and child are in a good mood.
Have a comfortable area to share reading time.
Stop reading when child becomes tired or loses interest.
Video
Suggested books
• Cloth or “indestructible” books• Board books with bright, simple illustrations• Board books with photographs of other babies• Books with contrast• Let child choose books for you to share
• Note: Not all “board books” are for babies/toddlers
Knowing that print has meaning, knowing how to handle a book, and recognizing print in the environment
PRINT AWARENESS
Being familiar with printed language helps children feel comfortable with books and understand that print is useful.
Print Awareness
• Use board books or cloth books and let child hold book and turn pages
• If there are only a few words on the page, point to each word as you say it
• Run finger under title and/or repeated phrases
• Talk about environmental print (road signs, menus, food labels)
• Point out different kinds of print within books
• Read aloud every day
Suggested books
• Any book! • If there are only a few words on each page,
point to each as you read it.• Books with repetitive text• Books with writing as part of the pictures• Books with different kinds of typeface
Retelling stories, retelling events, and adding descriptions
NARRATIVE SKILLS
The ability to describe things and events, and the ability to tell stories, helps children better understand what they read.
Narrative Skills
• As you talk with your child, give them time to “talk” back to you• Have props available so your child can
retell stories with puppets, a flannel board, props, or creative dramatics.• Encourage your child to talk and
expand their descriptions of things.• When your baby coos or babbles, talk
back to them.• Video
Suggested books• Board books with photos or illustrations of
everyday things• Board books with animals• Books with a repeated phrase or repetition
in the plot• Books that tell a cumulative tale
Knowing letters are different from each other, that the same letter can look different, and that each letter has a name and relates to specific sounds.
LETTER KNOWLEDGE
Letter Knowledge
Help babies/toddlers see and feel different shapes
Point out letters on toys, food boxes and other objects
Play matching games (alike and different)Encourage scribblingHave letters available to “play” with:
magnetic, foam, flannelSing the alphabet song, including
different versions
Suggested books
• Board books with shapes, colors• Shapes/colors books• Alike and different books• Alphabet/number books
Ability to hear and play with the smaller sounds in words
PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS
Includes rhyming, breaking words apart and putting word chunks together, and hearing beginning sounds.
Phonological Awareness• Sing songs and repeat them • Say nursery rhymes so that child hears words
that rhyme-- emphasize rhyming words• Add actions as you sing a song or recite a
poem--This helps child break down language into separate words
• Change initial sound in familiar songs, or a repeated phrase in a story
• Make up your own silly, nonsense rhymes• Say rhymes and sing songs in language most
comfortable for you Video: Songs & Language.wmv
• Sing throughout the day
Suggested books
• Books with rhyme• Books with alliteration• Books with sounds of animals and other things• Songs in book format• Books of Mother Goose rhymes• Poetry books• Any book!
Knowing the names of things, understanding the meaning of words
VOCABULARY
The more words young children know before they enter school, the better.
Children who have never encountered a word will have a hard time reading it in a book later on.
Vocabulary development
• Children should learn about 3,000 or more new words a year, according to Honig
• Vocabulary is richer and broader in picture books vs. watching TV
• Children need to be exposed to a word at least 12 times before they can start to use it in their vocabulary
VocabularyTake time before or during the reading of a
book to explain an unfamiliar word (don’t replace the word)
Talk about feelingsAdd descriptive wordsSpeak “parentese,” as in a slightly higher pitch,
speaking more slowly and in short sentences After reading a book, go back to an interesting
picture and talk about it, adding less familiar words
Show real items when possible; for babies and toddlers, point to and name objects
Suggested books
• Any book! Just read, talk about, and name objects in the book.
• Non-fiction books• Picture books that illustrate concepts- big/little,
up/down, etc.
ICfL/Read to Me Resources
• Support materials• ELL @your library• Early Literacy Centers• Parent/caregiver activity sheets (al
so in Spanish)
libraries.idaho.gov/page/read-to-me-resources
Have you visited your library lately?
• Storytimes• Play areas (dramatic, blocks)• Books • Music CDs and audiobooks, DVDs• Storykits• Computers• E-Books (e-audio, e-pub)• Other programs: Music and
Movement, Bilingual, School-Age, Parents, Child Care, STEM
New Resources:• DayByDayID.org• TumbleBooks™ through library
website• Read to Me on Facebook
• The Bookworm monthly newsletter subscription
Scan with your Smartphone or tablet to
go directly to page
The Bookworm
Subscribe: http://libraries.idaho.gov/page/bookworm
Books to Go program
The main objective is providing access to books for families who may have barriers to getting to the library.
The program consists of bins of books- 15 bags with 3 books in each bag. The bags are available to be checked out from home visitors. In each bag there is a Bookworm literacy handout, a contents page with a literacy handout, and a quick survey. The quick survey should be filled out and replaced with each new checkout.
Nuts and Bolts• Each site needs a library partner.
These have been identified, so we will be notifying them of who you are. They deliver bins, pick up surveys, and help you with problems.
• Books that are lost or damaged will be replaced over the next 2 ½ years.
• We’ll be asking you and your library partner to fill out surveys at some point. Our surveys are evaluated by our researcher, Dr. Roger Stewart, from BSU.
More nuts and bolts..
• There are activities on the Bookworms that home visitors can model or highlight.
• Encourage library usage! If they have fines under $20, encourage them to talk to their local librarian about them. They can attend storytimes or use computers without a library card.
Questions?
Additional Early Literacy SupportMaterials, handouts, research, and professional development that is available… • Saroj Ghoting, Early Literacy Consultant: www.earlylit.net/
• Hennepin County Library: www.hclib.org/BirthTo6/EarlyLit.cfm
• Washington Learning Systems: www.walearning.com/
• Ohio Ready to Read:www.ohreadytoread.org/
• Center for Early Literacy Learning (CELL): www.earlyliteracylearning.org/
• Zero to Three – School Readiness Interactive Tool
• Washington County Cooperative Library Services (WCCLS) http://www.wccls.org/kids
Thank you for joining us today. Please let us know how we can support your efforts
to bring strengthen literacy in the home.
Staci Shaw: [email protected] Bailey-White: [email protected] Compton: [email protected] Julie Armstrong:[email protected]
Idaho Commission for Libraries325 W. State St., Boise, 83702334-2150 or toll free 1-800-458-
3271
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF CHILD HEALTH AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT (NICHD)
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
NATIONAL ACADEMY PRESS
READING IS FUNDAMENTAL
IDAHO STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
SOURCES
Individual studies and citations can be provided upon request