Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
This guide focuses on the following six literacy skills that are important for learning to
read and write:
1. Having an interest in and enjoyment of books.
2. Being able to understand and tell stories and describe things.
3. Having a good vocabulary.
4. Having an awareness of how books and print work.
5. Hearing and using the different sounds of language.
6. Knowing letter names and the sounds they make.
A PRINT-RICH ENVIRONMENT
Teachers can help children understand the purpose of print by having
different types of print in the classroom.
When surrounded by a print-rich environment, children will see how reading
and writing are useful in everyday life.
Labeling:
Make labels for various items in the room. This tells children that things
can be identified by written words.
Label learning corners and containers for toys and other play materials.
There should be pictures that go with the words to help children identify
the different things and places.
Label children’s personal belongings and spaces with their names
(e.g., their art work, toothbrushes, hooks, or lockers).
Children can be encouraged to write their own names on their art work.
For a child with a visual disability, make some of the labels from
textured materials and encourage the child to feel the words.
Do not label everything, as this will be overwhelming for the children.
All labeling should be neat and spelled correctly.
The format of the written letters should be consistent with what children
will be taught to use when they get to school.
All letters should be lower case, with a capital first letter for a child’s
name or the beginning of a sentence.
Charts:
These should be displayed at children’s eye level (e.g., an alphabet
chart, a weather chart, and days of the week).
Word wall:
A word wall is a list of words that are commonly used.
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Language and Literacy
The words should be arranged alphabetically beneath each letter of the
alphabet chart.
The teacher and children add new words to the word wall as they are
used and discussed during story and other activity times.
A good place to start is to write children’s names on the lists according
to the first letters of their names.
The word wall is not intended to be used to teach children formally.
They should be free to use it as they choose as they explore and
develop their literacy skills.
Learning corners:
Meaningful print materials can be added to the learning corners that
encourage children to explore print.
Fantasy play corner:
There is print on everyday household products, which children quickly
learn to recognize because of its trademark packaging (e.g., Coca-
Cola, matchboxes, plastic containers of rice, empty maize meal bags).
This is often the first kind of print that children are exposed to.
Empty packaging can be added to the fantasy play area as well as
other reading materials like advertising leaflets, magazines,
newspapers, and books.
Writing materials can be added to encourage children to make
shopping lists or mark a calendar.
Building corner:
Make signs for roads and logos for buildings such as Shell or Shoprite.
Have writing materials in the building corner so that children can write
their own signs.
Educational toy corner:
Environmental print is print that children see around them every day on
product packaging, advertising leaflets, shop signs, and road signs.
Young children often learn to recognize this print before print in books
because of its unique design.
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Language and Literacy
Teachers can make matching and sorting cards from environmental
print items like advertising leaflets.
Matching games (like memory games) can also be made by drawing
pictures of animals as well as writing their names on cards.
Cereal boxes can be made into puzzles by cutting the front of the
boxes into different pieces.
Book corner:
Make sure that the book corner is an inviting place that will encourage
children to look at books, magazines, newsprint cuttings, and pictures.
Books can include those that children have made and self-made
booklets.
ORAL LANGUAGE
Young children learn language through their daily experiences with people
and hearing parents, siblings, teachers, friends, caregivers, and other people
around them speak.
Listening to other people’s speech helps children to love language and build
vocabulary.
Oral language is a part of literacy development that is often overlooked in
early childhood development classrooms, but speaking and listening lead the
way to reading and writing.
Teachers can help children learn by saying the correct word or phrase.
For example:
Child: “I forgetted to water the plants.”
Teacher: “Oh, you forgot to water the plants? Why don’t you…?”
o Introduce new words and sentences to explain concepts. For example:
Child: “What is happening to the water? It just goes and goes?”
Teacher: “Yes, it is soaking into the ground. The soil absorbs the water.”
o Answer children’s questions.
Children should also be encouraged to have conversations with each other
and practice their language skills.
To facilitate this:
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o During morning activities, ask children to take turns telling the group
what they saw or did over the weekend.
o Ask children to bring something from home to show and talk about.
o Have children talk about what activity they would like to do.
o Encourage children to play in the fantasy corner.
o Children use language to discuss the various roles they play with one
another and talk to each other about what they are doing.
o During other free-play activities encourage children to share their ideas
with one another.
DEFINITION
A syllable is a unit of pronunciation.
Some words are single syllables such as “hat.” Some words have several syllables
such as “app-le” and “cat-er-pill-ar.”
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Language and Literacy
Phonological awareness is the child’s ability to hear and play with the smaller
sounds of words. It should not be confused with phonics.
Phonics is a way of teaching reading that involves print where the child must
connect a sound to a letter of the alphabet.
Children need to first be able to hear the sounds that make up words:
The sounds at the ends of words (rhyming)
The sounds at the beginning of words
Breaking down words in a sentence
Breaking down words into syllables
This does not involve print at all but is an important step towards
understanding that words are composed of letters that represent sounds.
This important step in language development does not involve connecting the
sounds to the written letters of the alphabet.
Before this happens, children need to have lots of practice in hearing and
playing with the sounds that make up words.
These experiences will help children to sound out words when they start to
read.
There are many games and activities that teachers can plan to help children hear
and play with the sounds of language.
Singing: When children sing a song the words are naturally broken down into
smaller parts.
For example:
“I hear thun-der
I hear thun-der
Oh don’t you. Oh don’t you.
Pit-ter pat-ter, rain-drops, pit-ter pat-ter, rain-drops
I’m wet through. So are you.”
Children can clap the beat of each word as they sing the song.
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Rhyming: Poems, nursery rhymes, and songs that rhyme help children learn that
words have similar end sounds.
For example:
“Hey, diddle, diddle,
The cat and the fiddle,
The cow jumped over the moon.
The little dog laughed
To see such sport,
And the dish ran away with the spoon.”
When children know the song or rhyme well, the teacher can ask children to
guess the missing word.
For example:
“The cow jumped over the moon.
The little dog laughed
To see such sport,
And the dish ran away with the _____.”
Listening games: Listening games can help children hear the sounds of words, to
hear the beginning and end sounds of words, and break words into smaller parts.
To reinforce this idea, play the “telephone” game.
Have the children stand in a line and the child at one end of the line thinks of
a sentence and whispers it to the child next to him/her.
The message is passed on to each child in turn and the last child says the
sentence out loud.
STORYTELLING
Storytelling is particularly important for early literacy. When children listen to and
participate in stories, they:
Develop listening skills and start to recognize patterns in sounds
Get a sense of how a story is structured and the order in which it is told
Learn the meanings of new words and improve their vocabularies
Start to recognize words
Talk about what they hear as the story is being told
Increase their enjoyment of language
Children usually become very involved in stories that have lots of repetition
and rhyme and a predictable plot.
These types of stories provide opportunities for children to guess what the
story will be about or what will happen next.
Before reading or telling a story, make a list of all the new words and concepts
that will be introduced.
Plan to incorporate these words into the story with strategies to explain the
words to the children.
For example:
Before telling the story, introduce key words or concepts.
Stop briefly during the story to explain the meaning of new words or concepts.
After the story, remind children of the new words and concepts introduced.
Ask for other examples to help children make meaningful connections.
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Language and Literacy
RETELLING STORIES
When children listen to and then retell familiar stories in their own words they:
Learn to sequence the events in a story in the order in which things happened
Develop their narrative skills—their ability to describe events and tell stories
Are better able to understand the story
Improve their vocabulary
DEFINITION
“Narrative skills” refer to the child’s ability to tell stories and to describe things
and events.
It also helps the teacher to see how well the child has understood the story.
Well-known and repetitive stories are good for children to retell.
The teacher can support the child by using questions to prompt the child as
he/she tells the story.
For example:
• “What happened next?”
• “Why did he feel that way?”
KNOWLEDGE OF BOOKS
A book is for reading.
There is a top and a bottom to a book.
The book must be held right side up.
The book has a back and a front and the book is read from front to back.
The cover gives information about the book.
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KNOWLEDGE OF PRINT
It is the printed words that are read and not the pictures.
The pictures give meaning to what the print says.
Start reading on the first line of a page.
The printed text runs from left to right and, when the line is finished, moves to
the next line.
Print runs from top to bottom down a page.
Pages are turned in a certain direction.
DEFINITION
“Print motivation” is children’s enjoyment and love for books.
READING ALOUD
KEY IDEAS
Reading aloud is a planned reading of a book.
When children listen to stories being read, they start to develop a love for
books.
They also learn basic skills that will help them become readers.
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Language and Literacy
The best way to help children develop the understanding and skills they need
to read is to read aloud to them as frequently as possible.
This is particularly important for children living in poverty who may have no
age-appropriate books in their homes.
When books are read aloud, children:
Listen to the rhythm and sounds of words
Learn how to hold and read a book
Make connections between letters and sounds
Teachers should plan to read a book aloud to children every day, either in the
book corner with just a few children or during group times with a larger group
of children.
Although there is no one way to read aloud to children, there are some skills
that teachers can learn.
AFTER READING
• Invite children to tell you what they thought about the story. For example:
• “What did you think about the story?”
• “What did you like best?”
• Ask open-ended questions to help children remember the story. For example:
• “What was the first thing that happened?”
• “Then what happened?”
• “How do you think she felt when…?”
Teachers can ask if any children would like to retell or dramatize the story.
EARLY WRITING
HOW WRITING DEVELOPS
Research has shown that children go through seven stages of writing.
These stages might not be sequential, but all children will go through all of
these stages.
Stage 1: Writing by drawing
Stage 2: Writing by scribbling
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Stage 3: Writing by making letter like forms
Stage 4: Writing by reproducing well-learned units
Stage 5: Writing by copying
Stage 6: Writing by using invented spelling
Stage 7: Writing using conventional Print
KEY IDEAS
Reading and writing develop together. As children play and explore print in their
environment, they start to make sense of written language. Their first attempts at
writing are closely related to what they are learning about words.
Children teach themselves to write and do not need handwriting lessons or to taught
how to form letters. The most important thing they need to learn is why writing is
important. Children learn this by watching others use writing for a purpose or to
accomplish a task.
For example:
• Making a shopping list
• Writing a letter
• Writing their names
• Writing an appointment in a diary
• Writing reports
• Signing their names
When children see other people write, they will want to try to write themselves.