Learning to Read and Write: Developmentally Appropriate Practices for Young
Children, pt. 1
A joint position of the International Reading Association (IRA)
and the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC)
Why take a position on something as obviously important as
children's learning to read and write? The IRA and NAEYC believe
that this position statement will contribute significantly to an
improvement in practice and the development of supportive
educational policies. The two associations saw that a clear,
concise position statement was needed at this time for several
reasons.
- It is essential and urgent to teach children to read and
write competently, enabling them to achieve today's high standards
of literacy.
Although the United States enjoys the highest literacy rate in
its history, society now expects virtually everyone in the
population to function beyond the minimum standards of literacy.
Today the definition of basic proficiency in literacy calls
for a fairly high standard of reading comprehension and analysis.
The main reason is that literacy requirements of most jobs have
increased significantly and are expected to increase further in the
future. Communications that in the past were verbal (by phone or in
person) now demand reading and writing--messages sent by electronic
mail, Internet, or facsimile as well as print documents.
- With the increasing variation among young children in our
programs and schools, teaching today has become more
challenging.
Experienced teachers throughout the United States report that
the children they teach today are more diverse in their
backgrounds, experiences, and abilities than were those they taught
in the past. Kindergarten classes now include children who have
been in group settings for three or four years as well as children
who are participating for the first time in an organized early
childhood program. Classes include both children with identified
disabilities and children with exceptional abilities, children who
are already independent readers and children who are just beginning
to acquire some basic literacy knowledge and skills. Children in
the group may speak different languages at varying levels of
proficiency. Because of these individual and experiential
variations, it is common to find within a kindergarten classroom a
five-year range in children's literacy-related skills and
functioning (Riley 1996). What this means is that some
kindergartners may have skills characteristic of the typical
three-year-old, while others might be functioning at the level of
the typical eight-year-old. Diversity is to be expected and
embraced, but it can be overwhelming when teachers are expected to
produce uniform outcomes for all, with no account taken of the
initial range in abilities, experiences, interests, and
personalities of individual children.
- Among many early childhood teachers, a maturationist view of
young children's development persists despite much evidence to the
contrary.
A readiness view of reading development assumes that there is a
specific time in the early childhood years when the teaching of
reading should begin. It also assumes that physical and
neurological maturation alone prepare the child to take advantage
of instruction in reading and writing. The readiness perspective
implies that until children reach a certain stage of maturity all
exposure to reading and writing, except perhaps being read stories,
is a waste of time or even potentially harmful. Experiences
throughout the early childhood years, birth through age eight,
affect the development of literacy. These experiences constantly
interact with characteristics of individual children to determine
the level of literacy skills a child ultimately achieves. Failing
to give children literacy experiences until they are school age can
severely limit the reading and writing levels they ultimately
attain.
- Recognizing the early beginnings of literacy acquisition too
often has resulted in use of inappropriate teaching practices
suited to older children or adults perhaps but ineffective with
children in preschool, kindergarten, and the early grades.
Teaching practices associated with outdated views of literacy
development and/or learning theories are still prevalent in many
classrooms. Such practices include extensive whole-group
instruction and intensive drill and practice on isolated skills for
groups or individuals. These practices, not particularly effective
for primary-grade children, are even less suitable and effective
with preschool and kindergarten children. Young children especially
need to be engaged in experiences that make academic content
meaningful and build on prior learning. It is vital for all
children to have literacy experiences in schools and early
childhood programs. Such access is even more critical for children
with limited home experiences in literacy. However, these school
experiences must teach the broad range of language and literacy
knowledge and skills to provide the solid foundation on which high
levels of reading and writing ultimately depend.
- Current policies and resources are inadequate in ensuring
that preschool and primary teachers are qualified to support the
literacy development of all children, a task requiring strong
preservice preparation and ongoing professional
development.
For teachers of children younger than kindergarten age in the
United States, no uniform preparation requirements or licensure
standards exist. In fact, a high school diploma is the highest
level of education required to be a child care teacher in most
states. Moreover, salaries in child care and preschool programs are
too low to attract or retain better qualified staff. Even in the
primary grades, for which certified teachers are required, many
states do not offer specialized early childhood certification,
which means many teachers are not adequately prepared to teach
reading and writing to young children. All teachers of young
children need good, foundational knowledge in language acquisition,
including second-language learning, the processes of reading and
writing, early literacy development, and experiences and teaching
practices contributing to optimal development. Resources also are
insufficient to ensure teachers continuing access to professional
education so they can remain current in the field or can prepare to
teach a different age group if they are reassigned.
Children take their first critical steps toward learning to read
and write very early in life. Long before they can exhibit reading
and writing production skills, they begin to acquire some basic
understandings of the concepts about literacy and its functions.
Children learn to use symbols, combining their oral language,
pictures, print, and play into a coherent mixed medium and creating
and communicating meanings in a variety of ways. From their initial
experiences and interactions with adults, children begin to read
words, processing letter-sound relations and acquiring substantial
knowledge of the alphabetic system. As they continue to learn,
children increasingly consolidate this information into patterns
that allow for automaticity and fluency in reading and writing.
Consequently reading and writing acquisition is conceptualized
better as a developmental continuum than as an all-or-nothing
phenomenon (see part 4).
But the ability to read and write does not develop naturally,
without careful planning and instruction. Children need regular and
active interactions with print. Specific abilities required for
reading and writing come from immediate experiences with oral and
written language. Experiences in these early years begin to define
the assumptions and expectations about becoming literate and give
children the motivation to work toward learning to read and write.
From these experiences children learn that reading and writing are
valuable tools that will help them do many things in life.
The beginning years (birth through preschool)
Even in the first few months of life, children begin to
experiment with language. Young babies make sounds that imitate the
tones and rhythms of adult talk; they "read" gestures and facial
expressions, and they begin to associate sound sequences frequently
heard--words--with their referents (Berk 1996). They delight in
listening to familiar jingles and rhymes, play along in games such
as peek-a-boo and pat-a-cake, and manipulate objects such as board
books and alphabet blocks in their play. From these remarkable
beginnings children learn to use a variety of symbols.
In the midst of gaining facility with these symbol systems,
children acquire through interactions with others the insight that
specific kinds of marks--print--also can represent meanings. At
first children will use the physical and visual cues surrounding
print to determine what something says. But as they develop an
understanding of the alphabetic principle, children begin to
process letters, translate them into sounds, and connect this
information with a known meaning. Although it may seem as though
some children acquire these understandings magically or on their
own, studies suggest that they are the beneficiaries of
considerable, though playful and informal, adult guidance and
instruction (Durkin 1966; Anbar 1986).
Considerable diversity in children's oral and written language
experiences occurs in these years (Hart & Risley 1995). In home
and child care situations, children encounter many different
resources and types and degrees of support for early reading and
writing (McGill-Franzen & Lanford 1994). Some children may have
ready access to a range of writing and reading materials, while
others may not; some children will observe their parents writing
and reading frequently, others only occasionally; some children
receive direct instruction, while others receive much more casual,
informal assistance.
What this means is that no one teaching method or approach is
likely to be the most effective for all children (Strickland 1994).
Rather, good teachers bring into play a variety of teaching
strategies that can encompass the great diversity of children in
schools. Excellent instruction builds on what children already
know, and can do, and provides knowledge, skills, and dispositions
for lifelong learning. Children need to learn not only the
technical skills of reading and writing but also how to use these
tools to better their thinking and reasoning (Neuman 1998).
The single most important activity for building these
understandings and skills essential for reading success appears to
be reading aloud to children (Wells 1985; Bus, Van
Ijzendoorn, & Pellegrini 1995). High-quality book reading
occurs when children feel emotionally secure (Bus & Van
Ijzendoorn 1995; Bus et al. 1997) and are active participants in
reading (Whitehurst et al. 1994). Asking predictive and analytic
questions in small-group settings appears to affect children's
vocabulary and comprehension of stories (Karweit & Wasik 1996).
Children may talk about the pictures, retell the story, discuss
their favorite actions, and request multiple rereadings. It is the
talk that surrounds the storybook reading that gives it power,
helping children to bridge what is in the story and their own lives
(Dickinson & Smith 1994; Snow et al. 1995). Snow (1991) has
described these types of conversations as "decontextualized
language" in which teachers may induce higher-level thinking by
moving experiences in stories from what the children may see in
front of them to what they can imagine.
A central goal during these preschool years is to enhance
children's exposure to and concepts about print (Clay 1979,
1991; Holdaway 1979; Teale 1984; Stanovich & West 1989). Some
teachers use Big Books to help children distinguish many print
features, including the fact that print (rather than pictures)
carries the meaning of the story, that the strings of letters
between spaces are words and in print correspond to an oral
version, and that reading progresses from left to right and top to
bottom. In the course of reading stories, teachers may demonstrate
these features by pointing to individual words, directing
children's attention to where to begin reading, and helping
children to recognize letter shapes and sounds. Some researchers
(Adams 1990; Roberts 1998) have suggested that the key to these
critical concepts, such as developing word awareness, may lie in
these demonstrations of how print works.
Children also need opportunity to practice what they've learned
about print with their peers and on their own. Studies suggest that
the physical arrangement of the classroom can promote time with
books (Morrow & Weinstein 1986; Neuman & Roskos 1997). A
key area is the classroom library--a collection of attractive
stories and informational books that provides children with
immediate access to books. Regular visits to the school or public
library and library card registration ensure that children's
collections remain continually updated and may help children
develop the habit of reading as lifelong learning. In comfortable
library settings children often will pretend to read, using visual
cues to remember the words of their favorite stories. Although
studies have shown that these pretend readings are just that (Ehri
& Sweet 1991), such visual readings may demonstrate substantial
knowledge about the global features of reading and its
purposes.
Storybooks are not the only means of providing children with
exposure to written language. Children learn a lot about reading
from the labels, signs, and other kinds of print they see around
them (McGee, Lomax, & Head 1988; Neuman & Roskos 1993).
Highly visible print labels on objects, signs, and bulletin boards
in classrooms demonstrate the practical uses of written language.
In environments rich with print, children incorporate literacy into
their dramatic play (Morrow 1990; Vukelich 1994; Neuman &
Roskos 1997), using these communication tools to enhance the drama
and realism of the pretend situation. These everyday, playful
experiences by themselves do not make most children readers. Rather
they expose children to a variety of print experiences and the
processes of reading for real purposes.
For children whose primary language is other than English,
studies have shown that a strong basis in a first language promotes
school achievement in a second language (Cummins 1979). Children
who are learning English as a second language are more
likely to become readers and writers of English when they are
already familiar with the vocabulary and concepts in their primary
language. In this respect, oral and written language experiences
should be regarded as an additive process, ensuring that children
are able to maintain their home language while also learning to
speak and read English (Wong Fillmore, 1991). Including non-English
materials and resources to the extent possible can help to support
children's first language while children acquire oral proficiency
in English.
A fundamental insight developed in children's early years
through instruction is the alphabetic principle, the
understanding that there is a systematic relationship between
letters and sounds (Adams 1990). The research of Gibson and Levin
(1975) indicates that the shapes of letters are learned by
distinguishing one character from another by its type of spatial
features. Teachers will often involve children in comparing letter
shapes, helping them to differentiate a number of letters visually.
Alphabet books and alphabet puzzles in which children can see and
compare letters may be a key to efficient and easy learning.
At the same time children learn about the sounds of language
through exposure to linguistic awareness games, nursery
rhymes, and rhythmic activities. Some research suggests that the
roots of phonemic awareness, a powerful predictor of later reading
success, are found in traditional rhyming, skipping, and word games
(Bryant et al. 1990). In one study, for example (Maclean, Bryant,
& Bradley 1987), researchers found that three-year-old
children's knowledge of nursery rhymes specifically related to
their more abstract phonological knowledge later on. Engaging
children in choral readings of rhymes and rhythms allows them to
associate the symbols with the sounds they hear in these words.
Although children's facility in phonemic awareness has
been shown to be strongly related to later reading achievement, the
precise role it plays in these early years is not fully understood.
Phonemic awareness refers to a child's understanding and conscious
awareness that speech is composed of identifiable units, such as
spoken words, syllables, and sounds. Training studies have
demonstrated that phonemic awareness can be taught to children as
young as age five (Bradley & Bryant 1983; Lundberg, Frost,
& Petersen 1988; Cunningham 1990; Bryne & Fielding-Barnsley
1991). These studies used tiles (boxes) (Elkonin 1973) and
linguistic games to engage children in explicitly manipulating
speech segments at the phoneme level. Yet, whether such training is
appropriate for younger-age children is highly suspect. Other
scholars find that children benefit most from such training only
after they have learned some letter names, shapes, and sounds and
can apply what they learn to real reading in meaningful contexts
(Cunningham 1990; Foorman et al. 1991). Even at this later age,
however, many children acquire phonemic awareness skills without
specific training but as a consequence of learning to read (Wagner
& Torgesen 1987; Ehri 1994). In the preschool years sensitizing
children to sound similarities does not seem to be strongly
dependent on formal training but rather from listening to
patterned, predictable texts while enjoying the feel of reading and
language.
Children acquire a working knowledge of the alphabetic system
not only through reading but also through writing. A classic study
by Read (1971) found that even without formal spelling instruction,
preschoolers use their tacit knowledge of phonological relations to
spell words. Invented spelling (or phonic spelling) refers
to beginners' use of the symbols they associate with the sounds
they hear in the words they wish to write. For example, a child may
initially write b or bk for the word bike, to
be followed by more conventionalized forms later on.
Some educators may wonder whether invented spelling promotes
poor spelling habits. To the contrary, studies suggest that
temporary invented spelling may contribute to beginning reading
(Chomsky 1979; Clarke 1988). One study, for example, found that
children benefited from using invented spelling compared to having
the teacher provide correct spellings in writing (Clarke 1988).
Although children's invented spellings did not comply with correct
spellings, the process encouraged them to think actively about
letter-sound relations. As children engage in writing, they are
learning to segment the words they wish to spell into constituent
sounds.
Classrooms that provide children with regular opportunities to
express themselves on paper, without feeling too constrained for
correct spelling and proper handwriting, also help children
understand that writing has real purpose (Graves 1983; Sulzby 1985;
Dyson 1988). Teachers can organize situations that both demonstrate
the writing process and get children actively involved in it. Some
teachers serve as scribes and help children write down their ideas,
keeping in mind the balance between children doing it themselves
and asking for help. In the beginning these products likely
emphasize pictures with few attempts at writing letters or words.
With encouragement, children begin to label their pictures, tell
stories, and attempt to write stories about the pictures they have
drawn. Such novice writing activity sends the important message
that writing is not just handwriting practice--children are using
their own words to compose a message to communicate with
others.
Thus the picture that emerges from research in these first years
of children's reading and writing is one that emphasizes wide
exposure to print and to developing concepts about it and its forms
and functions. Classrooms filled with print, language and literacy
play, storybook reading, and writing allow children to experience
the joy and power associated with reading and writing while
mastering basic concepts about print that research has shown are
strong predictors of achievement.
In kindergarten
Knowledge of the forms and functions of print serves as a
foundation from which children become increasingly sensitive to
letter shapes, names, sounds, and words. However, not all children
typically come to kindergarten with similar levels of knowledge
about printed language. Estimating where each child is
developmentally and building on that base, a key feature of all
good teaching, is particularly important for the kindergarten
teacher. Instruction will need to be adapted to account for
children's differences. For those children with lots of print
experiences, instruction will extend their knowledge as they learn
more about the formal features of letters and their sound
correspondences. For other children with fewer prior experiences,
initiating them to the alphabetic principle, that a limited set of
letters comprises the alphabet and that these letters stand for the
sounds that make up spoken words, will require more focused and
direct instruction. In all cases, however, children need to
interact with a rich variety of print (Morrow, Strickland, &
Woo 1998).
In this critical year kindergarten teachers need to capitalize
on every opportunity for enhancing children's vocabulary
development. One approach is through listening to stories
(Feitelson, Kita, & Goldstein 1986; Elley 1989). Children need
to be exposed to vocabulary from a wide variety of genres,
including informational texts as well as narratives. The learning
of vocabulary, however, is not necessarily simply a byproduct of
reading stories (Leung & Pikulski 1990). Some explanation of
vocabulary words prior to listening to a story is related
significantly to children's learning of new words (Elley 1989).
Dickinson and Smith (1994), for example, found that asking
predictive and analytic questions before and after the readings
produced positive effects on vocabulary and comprehension.
Repeated readings appear to further reinforce the
language of the text as well as to familiarize children with the
way different genres are structured (Eller, Pappas, & Brown
1988; Morrow 1988). Understanding the forms of informational and
narrative texts seems to distinguish those children who have been
well read to from those who have not (Pappas 1991). In one study,
for example, Pappas found that with multiple exposures to a story
(three readings), children's retelling became increasingly rich,
integrating what they knew about the world, the language of the
book, and the message of the author. Thus, considering the benefits
for vocabulary development and comprehension, the case is strong
for interactive storybook reading (Anderson 1995). Increasing the
volume of children's playful, stimulating experiences with good
books is associated with accelerated growth in reading
competence.
Activities that help children clarify the concept of word
are also worthy of time and attention in the kindergarten
curriculum (Juel 1991). Language experience charts that let
teachers demonstrate how talk can be written down provide a natural
medium for children's developing word awareness in meaningful
contexts. Transposing children's spoken words into written symbols
through dictation provides a concrete demonstration that strings of
letters between spaces are words and that not all words are the
same length. Studies by Clay (1979) and Bissex (1980) confirm the
value of what many teachers have known and done for years: Teacher
dictations of children's stories help develop word awareness,
spelling, and the conventions of written language.
Many children enter kindergarten with at least some perfunctory
knowledge of the alphabet letters. An important goal for the
kindergarten teacher is to reinforce this skill by ensuring that
children can recognize and discriminate these letter shapes with
increasing ease and fluency (Mason 1980; Snow, Burns, & Griffin
1998). Children's proficiency in letter naming is a
well-established predictor of their end-of-year achievement (Bond
& Dykstra 1967, Riley 1996), probably because it mediates the
ability to remember sounds. Generally a good rule according to
current learning theory (Adams 1990) is to start with the more
easily visualized uppercase letters, to be followed by identifying
lowercase letters. In each case, introducing just a few letters at
a time, rather than many, enhances mastery.
At about the time children are readily able to identify letter
names, they begin to connect the letters with the sounds they hear.
A fundamental insight in this phase of learning is that a letter
and letter sequences map onto phonological forms. Phonemic
awareness, however, is not merely a solitary insight or an instant
ability (Juel 1991). It takes time and practice.
Children who are phonemically aware can think about and
manipulate sounds in words. They know when words rhyme or do not;
they know when words begin or end with the same sound; and they
know that a word like bat is composed of three sounds /b/
/a/ /t/ and that these sounds can be blended into a spoken word.
Popular rhyming books, for example, may draw children's attention
to rhyming patterns, serving as a basis for extending vocabulary
(Ehri & Robbins 1992). Using initial letter cues, children can
learn many new words through analogy, taking the familiar word
bake as a strategy for figuring out a new word,
lake.
Further, as teachers engage children in shared writing, they can
pause before writing a word, say it slowly, and stretch out the
sounds as they write it. Such activities in the context of real
reading and writing help children attend to the features of print
and the alphabetic nature of English.
There is accumulated evidence that instructing children in
phonemic awareness activities in kindergarten (and first grade)
enhances reading achievement (Stanovich 1986; Lundberg, Frost,
& Petersen 1988; Bryne & Fielding-Barnsley 1991, 1993,
1995). Although a large number of children will acquire phonemic
awareness skills as they learn to read, an estimated 20% will not
without additional training. A statement by the IRA (1998)
indicates that "the likelihood of these students becoming
successful as readers is slim to
none. . . . This figure [20%], however, can be
substantially reduced through more systematic attention to
engagement with language early on in the child's home, preschool
and kindergarten classes." A study by Hanson and Farrell (1995),
for example, examined the long-term benefits of a carefully
developed kindergarten curriculum that focused on word study and
decoding skills, along with sets of stories so that children would
be able to practice these skills in meaningful contexts. High
school seniors who early on had received this type of instruction
outperformed their counterparts on reading achievement, attitude
toward schooling, grades, and attendance.
In kindergarten many children will begin to read some words
through recognition or by processing letter-sound relations.
Studies by Domico (1993) and Richgels (1995) suggest that
children's ability to read words is tied to their ability to write
words in a somewhat reciprocal relationship. The more opportunities
children have to write, the greater the likelihood that they will
reproduce spellings of words they have seen and heard. Though not
conventional, these spellings likely show greater letter-sound
correspondences and partial encoding of some parts of words, like
SWM for swim, than do the inventions of preschoolers
(Clay 1975).
To provide more intensive and extensive practice, some teachers
try to integrate writing in other areas of the curriculum, like
literacy-related play (Neuman & Roskos 1992), and other project
activities (Katz & Chard 1989). These types of projects engage
children in using reading and writing for multiple purposes while
they are learning about topics meaningful to them.
Early literacy activities teach children a great deal about
writing and reading but often in ways that do not look much like
traditional elementary school instruction. Capitalizing on the
active and social nature of children's learning, early instruction
must provide rich demonstrations, interactions, and models of
literacy in the course of activities that make sense to young
children. Children must also learn about the relation between oral
and written language and the relation between letters, sounds, and
words. In classrooms built around a wide variety of print
activities, then in talking, reading, writing, playing, and
listening to one another, children will want to read and write and
feel capable that they can do so.
The primary grades
Instruction takes on a more formal nature as children move into
the elementary grades. Here it is virtually certain that children
will receive at least some instruction from a commercially
published product, like a basal or literature anthology series.
Although research has clearly established that no one method is
superior for all children (Bond & Dykstra 1967; Snow, Burns,
& Griffin 1998), approaches that favor some type of
systematic code instruction along with meaningful connected
reading report children's superior progress in reading.
Instruction should aim to teach the important letter-sound
relationships, which once learned are practiced through having many
opportunities to read. Most likely these research findings are a
positive result of the Matthew Effect, the rich-get-richer effects
that are embedded in such instruction; that is, children who
acquire alphabetic coding skills begin to recognize many words
(Stanovich 1986). As word recognition processes become more
automatic, children are likely to allocate more attention to
higher-level processes of comprehension. Since these reading
experiences tend to be rewarding for children, they may read more
often; thus reading achievement may be a by-product of reading
enjoyment.
One of the hallmarks of skilled reading is fluent, accurate
word identification (Juel, Griffith, & Gough 1986). Yet
instruction in simply word calling with flashcards is not reading.
Real reading is comprehension. Children need to read a wide variety
of interesting, comprehensible materials, which they can read
orally with about 90 to 95% accuracy (Durrell & Catterson
1980). In the beginning children are likely to read slowly and
deliberately as they focus on exactly what's on the page. In fact
they may seem "glued to print" (Chall 1983), figuring out the fine
points of form at the word level. However, children's reading
expression, fluency, and comprehension generally improve when they
read familiar texts. Some authorities have found the practice of
repeated rereadings in which children reread short selections
significantly enhances their confidence, fluency, and comprehension
in reading (Samuels 1979; Moyer 1982).
Children not only use their increasing knowledge of letter-sound
patterns to read unfamiliar texts. They also use a variety of
strategies. Studies reveal that early readers are capable of being
intentional in their use of metacognitive strategies (Brown,
& DeLoache 1978; Rowe 1994) Even in these early grades,
children make predictions about what they are to read,
self-correct, reread, and question if necessary, giving evidence
that they are able to adjust their reading when understanding
breaks down. Teacher practices, such as the Directed
Reading-Thinking Activity (DRTA), effectively model these
strategies by helping children set purposes for reading, ask
questions, and summarize ideas through the text (Stauffer
1970).
But children also need time for independent practice.
These activities may take on numerous forms. Some research, for
example, has demonstrated the powerful effects that children's
reading to their caregivers has on promoting confidence as well as
reading proficiency (Hannon 1995). Visiting the library and
scheduling independent reading and writing periods in literacy-rich
classrooms also provide children with opportunities to select books
of their own choosing. They may engage in the social activities of
reading with their peers, asking questions, and writing stories
(Morrow & Weinstein 1986), all of which may nurture interest
and appreciation for reading and writing.
Supportive relationships between these communication processes
lead many teachers to integrate reading and writing in
classroom instruction (Tierney & Shanahan 1991). After all,
writing challenges children to actively think about print. As young
authors struggle to express themselves, they come to grips with
different written forms, syntactic patterns, and themes. They use
writing for multiple purposes: to write descriptions, lists, and
stories to communicate with others. It is important for teachers to
expose children to a range of text forms, including stories,
reports, and informational texts, and to help children select
vocabulary and punctuate simple sentences that meet the demands of
audience and purpose. Since handwriting instruction helps children
communicate effectively, it should also be part of the writing
process (McGee & Richgels 1996). Short lessons demonstrating
certain letter formations tied to the publication of writing
provide an ideal time for instruction. Reading and writing
workshops, in which teachers provide small-group and individual
instruction, may help children to develop the skills they need for
communicating with others.
Although children's initial writing drafts will contain invented
spellings, learning about spelling will take on increasing
importance in these years (Henderson & Beers 1980; Richgels
1986). Spelling instruction should be an important component
of the reading and writing program since it directly affects
reading ability. Some teachers create their own spelling lists,
focusing on words with common patterns, high-frequency words, as
well as some personally meaningful words from the children's
writing. Research indicates that seeing a word in print, imagining
how it is spelled, and copying new words is an effective way of
acquiring spellings (Barron 1980). Nevertheless, even though the
teacher's goal is to foster more conventionalized forms, it is
important to recognize that there is more to writing than just
spelling and grammatically correct sentences. Rather, writing has
been characterized by Applebee (1977) as "thinking with a pencil."
It is true that children will need adult help to master the
complexities of the writing process. But they also will need to
learn that the power of writing is expressing one's own ideas in
ways that can be understood by others.
As children's capabilities develop and become more fluent,
instruction will turn from a central focus on helping children
learn to read and write to helping them read and write to learn.
Increasingly the emphasis for teachers will be on encouraging
children to become independent and productive readers,
helping them to extend their reasoning and comprehension abilities
in learning about their world. Teachers will need to provide
challenging materials that require children to analyze and think
creatively and from different points of view. They also will need
to ensure that children have practice in reading and writing (both
in and out of school) and many opportunities to analyze topics,
generate questions, and organize written responses for different
purposes in meaningful activities.
Throughout these critical years accurate assessment of
children's knowledge, skills, and dispositions in reading and
writing will help teachers better match instruction with how and
what children are learning. However, early reading and writing
cannot simply be measured as a set of narrowly-defined skills on
standardized tests. These measures often are not reliable or valid
indicators of what children can do in typical practice, nor are
they sensitive to language variation, culture, or the experiences
of young children (Shepard & Smith 1988; Shepard 1994; Johnston
1997). Rather, a sound assessment should be anchored in real-life
writing and reading tasks and continuously chronicle a wide range
of children's literacy activities in different situations. Good
assessment is essential to help teachers tailor appropriate
instruction to young children and to know when and how much
intensive instruction on any particular skill or strategy might be
needed.
By the end of third grade, children will still have much to
learn about literacy. Clearly some will be further along the path
to independent reading and writing than others. Yet with
high-quality instruction, the majority of children will be able to
decode words with a fair degree of facility, use a variety of
strategies to adapt to different types of text, and be able to
communicate effectively for multiple purposes using
conventionalized spelling and punctuation. Most of all they will
have come to see themselves as capable readers and writers, having
mastered the complex set of attitudes, expectations, behaviors, and
skills related to written language.
Go to:
Overview
Part 1: Statement of the issues and review of the research
Part 2: Statement of the position and recommendations for teaching practices and policies
Part 3: References
Part 4: Continuum of
children's development in early reading and writing
This document is an official position statement of the
International Reading Association and the National Association for the Education
of Young Children
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