Reading and Maths Flashcards
What is emergent literacy?
The skills and knowledge that are precursors to reading, includes concept of print:
direction, spaces between letters, written words correspond to spoken words, read pages in specific order
What is emergent literacy linked too?
Home literacy environment
How does emergent literacy develop?
From birth as you get older - realisation that marks on a page correspond to spoken sounds, this discovery is made during early years
Crucial to understand that parents aren’t just making things up, the words on a page have meaning
Experience of sharing a book with a parent, being read too is very important - if you haven’t been read too, emergent literacy won’t develop
What did Weigel et al find about the home literacy environment?
That it was a predictor of children’s subsequent reading ability
One year longitudinal study of 85 families with pre-schoolers not yet in kindergarten
Found that:
Parent-child literacy/language activities predicts greater print knowledge and reading interest
Home literacy practises depended on parent beliefs and values - parental motivation important
What did Froiland et al find when looking at pathways to home literacy environment?
551 pre-schoolers attending head start classrooms
Found that neighbourhood socioeconomic wellbeing lead to the home literacy environment (no of books) which impacted child’s early literacy, after controlling for parents educational level
People in affluent families had more positive home environments
But correlational data - limitation, doesn’t show a predictor over time - should do a follow up
Social context does matter
What does research on the wider family context show?
Family context isn’t just based on how many books there are, consider general parent-child interactive styles as well as measures of home environment (e.g. overall quality and responsiveness - HOME)
What did Roberts et al find when looking at HOME?
It was the most consistent and strongest predictor of children’s language and literacy skills
Why is mediation important?
Important to understand why there are indirect pathways
What are the predictors of reading ability?
Good evidence for:
- Concepts of print
- Phonemic awareness (working with the sounds of language, segmenting, blending, discriminating between phonemes)
- Rhyme awareness
- Letter knowledge
Performance on all of these predicts reading ability
What are the tests of phonemic awareness?
Phoneme deletion task (start off with whole syllable deletion, then say ward, say spot without the p)
Counting out phonemes
Identifying which of three words doesn’t contain the same sound
Bradley and Bryant - longitudinal study and training study
Sound categorisation task (odd one out in a list of CVC words)before reading predicted later reading and spelling 3 years later
Training in sound categorisation in 40 lessons over two years led to superior reading and spelling - good for interventions
Supported hypothesis that early rhyme and alliteration awareness is causally important
Schatschneider et al - longitudinal study from kindergarten to 2nd grade
Large array of possible predictors of reading outcomes
Consistent predictive value of phonemic awareness, knowledge of letter sounds and letter naming speed (rapid automatised naming of letters, RAN)
What are the controversies when teaching reading?
Phonics vs whole word
Reading schemes vs real books
Synthetic phonics vs analytic phonics
should we be starting this as early as we do?
What is the phonics vs whole-word debate?
Whether children can be taught to read by decomposing whole words, using the context, cues of the world, visual image of the word etc
Evidence of learning whole words from context
What did Goodman et al find about learning words from context?
Reading words in context showed 60-80% fewer errors than reading in isolation (lists) - led to the assumption that we should use the context to encourage children to learn
Implications for national policy