JTevis Early Literacy Presentation- ENG 100

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Transcript of JTevis Early Literacy Presentation- ENG 100

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The Effects of Early Literacy

Jessi TevisD. Mascle -ENG 100

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Does the early learning of literacy actually effect a child’s future?

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Research shows that a child’s literacy is effected

by:

A child’s parent’s

literacy level

A family’s income

Learning Disabilities

Parent Intervention

Teacher Intervention Preschool And Many

More!

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Parent Literacy

Levels Affect Their Child’s

Literacy Levels…

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Research shows that a mother’s level of education is

one of the most important factors influencing children’s

reading levels and other school achievements.

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It is proven that more highly educated mothers have greater success in providing children with the cognitive and language skills that contribute to early success in school. Research also proves that children of mothers with high levels of education stay in school longer that children of mothers with low levels of education.

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How does income affect a child’s

literacy level???According to the National Center for Children in Poverty (NCCP) children of low-income families began school far below their more income advantaged peers.

In fact…•Before entering kindergarten, the average cognitive scores of preschool-age children in the highest income group are 60 percent above the average scores of children in the lowest income group. •At age 4 years, children who live below the poverty line are 18 months below what is normal for their age group; by age 10 that gap is still present. For children living in the poorest families, the gap is even larger•By the time children from middle-income families with well-educated parents are in third grade, they know about 12,000 words. Third grade children from low-income families with undereducated parents who don’t talk to them very much have vocabularies of around 4,000 words, one-third as many words as their middle-income peers.

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Low-literate parents are more likely to exert a positive influence on their children’s academic achievement when they are able to enhance their own literacy skills as well.

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The Effects of Learning

Disabilities

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Learning disabilities are problems that affect the brain's

ability to receive, process, analyze, or store information. These problems can make it difficult for a student to learn as quickly as someone who isn't affected by learning

disabilities…

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Learning Disabilities Can Cause:

TROUBLE FOCUSING OR

CONCENTRATING

TROUBLE READING TROUBLE WRITING

TROUBLE SPELLING

SOCIAL

STRUGGLES

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Parent Intervention…

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it affects a child’s literacy level.

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Children who read to their parents on a regular basis made greater gains than

children receiving an equivalent amount of extra

reading instruction by reading specialists at

school .

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Teacher intervention should be INCREASED!

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If teacher intervention is increased…

So is a child’s literacy level.

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Does it really matter??

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Out of thirteen students that completed an online survey, only seven students attended preschool…

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The preschool phase is strongly associated

with the improvement in academic

functioning in children.

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Early Literacy

Learning…

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is our ladder…

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to SUCCESS.

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Works Cited• Benjamin, Ann L. "Parents' Literacy and Their Children's Success in School: Recent Research, Promising Practices, and

Research Implications." Research of the U.S. Department of Education (1993): 1-6. Web. 29 Mar 2010. <http://www2.ed.gov/pubs/OR/ResearchRpts/parlit.html>.

• Campbell, Frances A., and Craig T. Ramey. "Mid-Adolescent Outcomes for High Risk Students: An Examination of the Continuing Effects of Early Intervention." Carolina Abecedarian Project NC, Intervention Education (1993): 1-38. Web. 29 Mar 2010. <http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/13/e8/bc.pdf>.

• "Children with Learning Disabilities." Facts for Families May 1999: 1-2. Web. 29 Mar 2010. http://www.kinderstart.com/frame_for_links.php?redirect=http://www.aacap.org/publications/factsfam/ld.html.

• Evans, Rick. 'Learning "Schooled Literacy": The Literate Life Histories of Mainstream Student Readers and Writers.' Discourse Processes 16.3 (1993): 317-340. Print.

• Grace Onchwari, Jared Keengwe. Teacher Mentoring and Early Literacy Learning: A Case Study of a Mentor-Coach Initiative. Early Childhood Education Journal, Volume 37, Number 4 (January 2010), pp. 311-317, <http://ejournals.ebsco.com/direct.asp?ArticleID=48EBA04D2ACBCE53BE58

• Naslund, J.C., Schneider W. “Kindergarten letter knowledge, phonological skills, and memory processes: Relative effects on early literacy.” (1996) Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 62 (1), pp. 30-59. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=MImg&_imagekey=B6WJ9-45MGWPF-1G-1&_cdi=6873&_user=549231&_pii=S0022096596900211&_orig=browse&_coverDate=06%2F30%2F1996&_sk=999379998&view=c&wchp=dGLbVtz-.

• Senechal, Monique. "The Effect of Family Literacy Interventions on Children's Acquisition of Reading: From Kindergarten to Grade 3. A Meta-Analytic Review." Partnership for Reading (2006): 39. Web. 29 Mar 2010. <http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/29/99/ea.pdf>.

• Wang, Chuang. "Effects of Targeted Intervention on Early Literacy Skills of At-Risk Students." Journal of Research in Childhood Education (2008): 1-12. Web. 31 Mar 2010. <http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Effects+of+targeted+intervention+on+early+literacy+skills+of+at-risk...-a0181896721>.