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preschool
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public librarian recruitment
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The Sound Awareness for Pre-Readers Program for Parents of 4- and 5-
Year Olds
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Learning to read and write is essential for school success. Children
who read early and well read a lot more than children who are slow to
learn to read, or who are having reading difficulties. As a result, successful
readers become smarter, not just about how to read, but also about all
those things that can be learned from books. In contrast, children who
lag behind in reading receive less practice in reading than other children,
miss out on opportunities to develop strategies for understanding what
they read, often encounter reading material that is too hard, and may
come to dislike reading and school assignments that require reading.
Reading and writing are crucial to living and working in our society.
We use these skills at the grocery store when writing a check for food,
in the car when reading directions, at the bank when filling out paperwork,
and at home when reading the newspaper. Many children, however, fail at
the task of learning to read. According to the National Center for Educational
Statistics, 38% of fourth graders nationally cannot read at the basic
level. In other words, they cannot read and understand a simple paragraph
of the type that would be found in a children's book. In some school districts
that serve large numbers of children living in poverty, the number of
fourth graders who cannot read at the basic level hovers around 70%. These
children seldom catch up. They enter high school with the ability to read
only at an elementary school level. For many, the work becomes too difficult
and they end up dropping out of high school. For those who go on to graduate,
the picture is not much better. These young adults cannot participate
fully in a society such as ours, where expectations for reading and writing
arise in almost every daily activity. Further, they miss out on the joys
of reading and are poorly prepared as parents to help their own children
become ready to read.
Within the past two decades, research has identified phonological sensitivity
(sometimes called "phonological awareness" or "phonemic
awareness") as a central basis for learning to read. Phonological
sensitivity involves understanding that words are made up of smaller sounds.
These smaller sound units include individual words in compound words ("sea"
and "shell" in "seashell"), syllables ("but"
and "ter" in "butter"), and phonemes, which are the
smallest speech sounds and are the sounds depicted by letters (the "buh"
sound in "bat"). Phonological sensitivity might be revealed
by a child's ability to identify words that rhyme ("What rhymes with
cat?), blend spoken syllables or letter-sounds together to form a word
("What do you get when you put 'tie' and 'ger' together?") delete
syllables or a letter-sound from spoken words to form a new word ("What
is 'window' without 'doe'?"), or count the number of letter-sounds
in a spoken word ("How many letter sounds are there in 'milk'?"
Answer = four). Children who have better phonological sensitivity as indicated
by their ability to answer questions such as these learn to read quicker
and better than children who have trouble with these tasks.
Well-developed phonological sensitivity promotes the development of reading
because letters in written language correspond to phonemes, e.g., the
letter B makes the buh sound. Understanding that words are made up of
smaller sounds helps children "break the code" between written
language (letters) and spoken language (sounds). Research with school-age
children indicates that most poor readers have poor phonological sensitivity
skills.
Children's phonological sensitivity begins to develop during the preschool
years. Unless children are given help from teachers, parents, or other
adults, those with low levels of phonological sensitivity will continue
to be delayed in this skill from the late preschool period forward. The
development of phonological sensitivity in young children progresses from
sensitivity to large and meaningful units of sound (e.g., individual words
within sentences or individual words within compound words), to syllables,
to phonemes.
The Sound Awareness for Pre-readers program, described subsequently,
consists of activities that are designed to help parents teach their children
phonological sensitivity skills. The program includes language games appropriate
for four- to five-year-old children.
Most programs designed to facilitate phonological sensitivity in pre-readers
involve a large number of activities that span the developmental progression
of phonological skills from word sensitivity to phoneme sensitivity. Such
programs would be impractical for libraries to implement with parents
and would likely be overly cumbersome and too involved for many parents
to implement with their children (two such well-designed programs are
Ladders to Literacy and Phonemic Awareness in Young Children:
A Classroom Curriculum). The activities described in the Sound Awareness
for Pre-readers Program, however, can be extended by advancing along the
continuum of phonological sensitivity development (e.g., the "Say
It Slow--Say It Fast Puzzle Game," described in the following materials,
can be performed with syllables or phonemes). A description of several
extension activities is provided for libraries that have the ability to
offer a series of programs to the same group of parents over a several
month period.
Children from families of all family backgrounds can have difficulty
learning to read. However, children from low-income families are disproportionately
at risk for reading difficulties. These children are more likely to be
slow in the development of oral language skills, print awareness, and
phonological sensitivity prior to school entry than their middle-income
counterparts. As a group, children from low-income families tend to have
fewer experiences with book sharing, print materials, and other experiences
that foster emergent literacy skills. Thus, a library's recruiting efforts
for the Sound Awareness for Pre-readers program might pay special attention
to organizations and information sources that serve low-income families,
while also making the program available for all families.
Although the origins of phonological sensitivity have not yet been identified
completely, we know that it depends on a well-developed vocabulary. Thus
the Dialogic Reading Program for Parents of Two and Three Year Olds, described
elsewhere in this package of materials, may be a more appropriate starting
point for a child who has been slow to develop oral language, even if
the child is four years of age or older. Even though vocabulary and other
oral language abilities are prerequisites to phonological sensitivity,
research has indicated that the types of activities that promote vocabulary
development (such as shared book reading) are different from the activities
that promote phonological sensitivity. Consequently, both the vocabulary
building experiences provided in the Talking and Books program and the
phonological sensitivity building experiences provided in the Sound Awareness
for Pre-readers program are necessary for children to be fully ready to
learn to read.
List of Relevant Research
Adams, M. J. (1990). Learning to read: Thinking and learning about
print. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Adams, M. J., Foorman, B. R., Lundberg, I., & Beeler, T. (1998).
Phonemic Awareness in Young Children: A classroom curriculum.
Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brooks Publishing Company.
Juel, C. (1988). Learning to read and write: A longitudinal study of
54 children from first through fourth grades. Journal of Educational
Psychology, 80, 437-447.
Juel, C., Griffith, P., & Gough, P. (1986). Acquisition of literacy:
A longitudinal study of children in first and second grade. Journal
of Educational Psychology, 78, 243-255.
Lonigan, C. J., Burgess, S. R., & Anthony, J. L. (2000). Development
of emergent literacy and early reading skills in preschool children: Evidence
from a latent variable longitudinal study. Developmental Psychology,
36, 596-613.
Lonigan, C. J., Burgess, S. R., Anthony, J. L., & Barker, T. A. (1998).
Development of phonological sensitivity in two- to five-year-old children.
Journal of Educational Psychology, 90, 294-311.
Notari-Syverson, A., O'Conner, R. E., & Vadasy, P. F. (1998). Ladders
to literacy: A preschool activity book. Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brooks
Publishing Company.
Raz, I.S., and Bryant, P. (1990). Social background, phonological awareness,
and children's reading. British Journal of Developmental Psychology,
8, 209-225.
Sénéchal, M., LeFevre, J., Thomas, E. M., & Daley, K. E. (1998).
Differential effects of home literacy experiences on the development of
oral and written language. Reading Research Quarterly, 13, 96-116.
Stanovich, K. E. (1992). Speculations on the causes and consequences
of individual differences in early reading acquisition. In P. B. Gough,
L. C. Ehri, and R. Treiman (Eds.), Reading acquisition (pp. 307-342).
Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Stanovich, K. E., & Siegel, L. S. (1994). Phenotypic performance
profile of children with reading disabilities: A regression-based test
of the phonological-core variable-difference model. Journal of Educational
Psychology, 86, 24-53.
Wagner, R. K. & Torgesen, J. K. (1987). The natural of phonological
processing and its causal role in the acquisition of reading skills. Psychological
Bulletin, 101, 192-212.
Wagner, R. K., Torgesen, J. K., & Rashotte, C. A. (1994). Development
of reading-related phonological processing abilities: New evidence of
bidirectional causality from a latent variable longitudinal study. Developmental
Psychology, 30, 73-87.
Wagner, R. K., Torgesen, J. K., Rashotte, C. A., Hecht, S. A., Barker,
T. A., Burgess, S. R., Donahue, J., & Garon, T., (1997). Changing
relations between phonological processing abilities and word-level reading
as children develop from beginning to skilled readers: A 5-year longitudinal
study. Developmental Psychology, 33, 468-479.
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