Explaining Phonological Awareness and Alphabet Instruction
You are here
At bedtime, when my (coauthor Sonia Cabell’s) son was about 3 1/2 years old, we were talking about circles. Suddenly, his eyes widened, and he exclaimed, “I know! S is for circle!” I was thrilled because he was showing his understanding of the alphabetic principle. He perceived circle as a word independent from the shape. He could hear that it started with an /s/ sound, and he knew that s represents the /s/ sound (although in this word, it is spelled by the letter c, which can also represent the /s/ sound).
Literacy Learning for Infants, Toddlers, and Preschoolers: Key Practices for Educators is written by some of the foremost early literacy experts in the field. Using eight key practices—Knowing, Showing, Designing, Including, Engaging, Explaining, Observing, and Responding—as their framework, the authors discuss how educators can support important areas of young children’s early literacy development: Language and knowledge, print concepts, sounds and letters, writing, and text comprehension.
Already a NAEYC Member? Log into your NAEYC Membership Portal to read the full article!
Not a member yet? Join now to read the full article!
Tanya S. Wright, PhD, is professor of early literacy in the Marsal Family School of Education at the University of Michigan.
Sonia Q. Cabell, PhD, is associate professor of reading education in the School of Teacher Education and the Florida Center for Reading Research at Florida State University. Before receiving her PhD at the University of Virginia, she worked as a second grade teacher and literacy coach. Dr. Cabell’s research focuses on early literacy instruction with a particular interest in the prevention of reading difficulties. She has authored over 60 publications, including research articles, books, book chapters, and early childhood language and literacy curricula. She has served as principal investigator or co-principal investigator on federally funded research projects totaling approximately $9 million. Dr. Cabell has been an advisor or consultant for a variety of national organizations and state departments of education.
Nell K. Duke, EdD, is professor in literacy, language, and culture in the School of Education and the combined program in education and psychology at the University of Michigan. As of September 2022, Dr. Duke serves as the executive director of the Center for Early Literacy Success at Stand for Children (www.stand.org). She earned her bachelor’s degree from Swarthmore College and her master’s and doctoral degrees from Harvard University. Her work focuses on early literacy development, particularly among children living in economic poverty. Dr. Duke has received the International Literacy Association’s William S. Gray Citation of Merit for outstanding contributions to research, theory, practice, and policy. Her website is www.nellkduke.org.
Mariana Souto-Manning, PhD, is the fifth president of Erikson Institute in Chicago. She has served as professor of education at Teachers College, Columbia University, and held academic appointments at the University of Iceland and King’s College London. Committed to the pursuit of justice in early childhood teaching and teacher education, Dr. Souto-Manning’s research (re)centers methodologies and pedagogies on the lives, values, and experiences of intersectionally minoritized people of color. As she problematizes issues of colonization, assimilation, and oppression in schooling and society, Dr. Souto-Manning critically examines theoretical and methodological issues and dilemmas of doing research with communities of color, considering questions such as “Critical for whom?” and “According to whom?” Dr. Souto-Manning authored and coauthored 10 books, dozens of book chapters, and over 80 peer-reviewed articles. She has received a number of research awards, including the American Educational Research Association Division K Innovations in Research on Diversity in Teacher Education Award.