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The Dialogic Reading Program for parents of 2- and 3- Year Olds
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Over a third of children in the U.S. enter school unprepared to learn.
They lack the vocabulary, sentence structure, and other basic skills that
are required to do well in school. Children who start behind generally
stay behind--they drop out, they turn off. Their lives are at risk.
Why are so many children deficient in the skills that are critical to
school readiness? Children's experience with books plays an important
role. Many children enter school with thousands of hours of experience
with books. Their homes contain hundreds of picture books. They see their
parents and brothers and sisters reading for pleasure. Other children
enter school with fewer than 25 hours of shared book reading. There are
few, if any, children's books in their homes. Their parents and siblings
aren't readers.
Picture book reading provides children with many of the skills that are
necessary for school readiness: vocabulary, sound structure, the meaning
of print, the structure of stories and language, sustained attention,
the pleasure of learning, and on and on. Preschoolers need food, shelter,
love; they also need the nourishment of books.
It is important to read frequently with preschoolers. Children who are
read to three times per week or more do much better in later development
than children who are read to less than three times per week.
How we read to preschoolers is as important as how frequently we read
to them. Researchers have developed a method of reading to preschoolers
called Dialogic Reading. When most adults share a book with a preschooler,
they read and the child listens. In dialogic reading, the adult helps
the child become the teller of the story. The adult becomes the listener,
the questioner, the audience for the child. No one can learn to play the
piano just by listening to someone else play. Likewise, no one can learn
to read just by listening to someone else read. Children learn most from
books when they are actively involved.
Dialogic reading for children who are talkers but who are not yet pre-readers
(generally two and three-year-olds) is based upon three main techniques
- asking "what" questions, asking open-ended questions, and
expanding upon what the child says - which are designed to teach vocabulary
and encourage children to tell more complete descriptions of what they
see.
The goals of the program are: (1) to help parents increase the
number of times they ask their child to name objects in the pictures;
(2) to help parents to start using more general questions as a way of
getting their children to say more than just one word at a time; and (3)
to encourage pleasureable interactions around books for both parents and
children.
Dialogic reading works. Children who have been read to dialogically are
substantially ahead of children who have been read to traditionally on
tests of language development. Children can jump ahead by several months
in just a few weeks of dialogic reading. These effects have been found
with hundreds of children in areas as geographically different as New
York, Tennessee, and Mexico, in settings as varied as homes, preschools,
and daycare centers, and with children from economic backgrounds ranging
from poverty to affluence.
Dialogic reading is just children and adults having a conversation about
a book. Children will enjoy dialogic reading more than traditional reading
as long as parents learn to mix-up questions with straight reading, vary
what they do from reading to reading, and follow their child's interest.
List of Relevant Research
Arnold, D.S. & Whitehurst, G.J. (1994). Accelerating language development
through picture book reading: A summary of dialogic reading and its effect.
In D. Dickinson (Ed.), Bridges to literacy: Approaches to supporting
child and family literacy (pp. 103-128). Cambridge, MA: Basil Blackwell.
Crain-Thoreson, C. & Dale, P.S. (1999). Enhancing linguistic performance:
Parents and teachers as book reading partners for children with language
delays. Topics in Early Childhood Special Education: Special
Issue: 62.19(1): 28-39.
Dale, P.S., Crain-Thoreson, C., Notari-Syverson, A., & Cole, K. (1996).
Parent-child book reading as an intervention for young children with language
delays. Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, 16:
213-235.
Hargrave, A.C. & Senechal, M. (2000). A book reading intervention
with preschool children who have limited vocabularies: The benefits of
regular reading and dialogic reading. Early Childhood Research Quarterly,
15, 75-90.
Huebner, C.E. (2000). Promoting toddlers' language development: A randomized-controlled
trial of a community-based intervention. Journal of Applied Developmental
Psychology, 21, 513-535.
Huebner, C.E. (2000). Community-based support for preschool readiness
among children in poverty. Journal of Education for Students Placed
At Risk, 5, 291-314.
Lonigan, C.J., Bloomfield, B.G., Dyer, S.M., & Samwel, C.S. (1999).
Effects of two shared-reading interventions on emergent literacy skills
of at-risk preschoolers. Journal of Early Intervention, 22, 306-322.
Reese, E. & Cox, A. (1999). Quality of adult book reading affects
children's emergent literacy. Developmental Psychology, 35,:
20-28.
Senechal, M. (1997). The differential effect of storybook reading on
preschoolers' acquisition of expressive and receptive vocabulary. Journal
of Child Language, 24, 123-138.
Senechal, M & Cornell, E. (1993). Vocabulary acquisition through
shared reading experiences. Reading Research Quarterly, 28, 361-373.
Valdez-Menchaca, M. C., & Whitehurst, G. J. (1992). Accelerating
language development through picture book reading: A systematic extension
to Mexican daycare. Developmental Psychology, 28, 1106-1114.
Whitehurst, G.J., Falco, F.L., Lonigan, C., Fischel, J.E., Valdez-Menchaca,
M.C., DeBaryshe, B.D., & Caulfield, M. (1988). Accelerating language
development through picture-book reading. Developmental Psychology,
24, 552-558.
Whitehurst, G.J., Arnold, D.H., Epstein, J.N., Angell, A.L., Smith, M.,
& Fischel, J.E. (1994). A picture book reading intervention in daycare
and home for children from low-income families. Developmental Psychology,
30, 679-689.
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