Emergent Literacy Early Childhood Education Georgia CTAE Resource Network Instructional Resources...

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Emergent Literacy

Early Childhood Education

Georgia CTAE Resource Network

Instructional Resources Office

Written By: Habersham Child Development Center

July 2009

Areas of Literacy Development Oral Language

The ability to relate sounds to meanings Phonological Awareness

The ability to attend to the sounds of language as distinct from its meaning

Print Awareness Knowledge about the functions, structures and

conventions of print Book Interest and Understanding

Interest in and knowledge of how books work

Phonological Awareness

Co-relational studies have identified phonemic awareness and letter knowledge as the two best school-entry predictors of how well children will learn to read during the first 2 years of instruction.

What is Phonological Awareness?

Umbrella term that includes word awareness, syllable awareness, and individual sound (phoneme) awareness

Conscious awareness of the sound structure of words and the ability to manipulate sounds in words

Why is phonological awareness so important?

“A child’s level of phonemic awareness on entering kindergarten is widely held to be the strongest single determinant of the success that she or he will experience in learning to read, or, conversely, the likelihood that she or he will fail.” (Adams, 1990)

What is the sequence of skills in Phonological awareness?

Word Awareness The ability to relate sounds to meanings

Rhyme Awareness Syllable Awareness

Blend compound words Segment compound words Blend multi-syllabic words Segment multi-syllabic words Syllable deletion

Rhyme Awareness

Phonemic Awareness Phoneme blending

Onset-rime blending Onsets – single consonant or consonant blend

that precedes the vowel Word endings – rimes – the vowel and the

following consonants Individual sound blending

Identify initial sound in words Produce initial sound in words

Teaching Strategies for PhonologicalAwareness

Auditory Discrimination Listening for the alarm clock

Objective: locate a sound that blends easily with the environment

Materials: ticking clock Activity: One child closes his eyes, while

another child hides the clock. The child then uncovers his eyes and looks for the clock by listening for the ticking sound. During the search, the other children must be as quiet as mice…

Auditory Discrimination Cont…

Identifying common sounds Discovery Toys – “What’s that sound?”

Auditory Processing Do you remember?

Objective: help children to recall one and two-step directions

Materials: random classroom items Activity: Instruct the child who is “it” to

complete a series of actions (hop to the door, and say “boo.” “Go to the table and pick up the book and the red block.”

Word Segmentation Introducing the idea of sentences

Objective: Introduce children to the notion of sentences

Materials: Interesting pictures Activity: Give children a simple explanation of a

sentence. For example: it’s like a very short story. It tells something and has to name who or what it is telling about. Give examples of sentences using the children’s names. Point out that each sentence tells who or what and something about the who or what. Give examples of non-sentences, like “Mary” or “is jumping.”

Syllable Segmentation Name Sort

Objective: Children clap the syllables in their names Materials: 4 pieces of paper marked with 1, 2, 3, or 4

dots, pictures and/or name cards of children in class Activity: Place the paper marked with dots on the

floor, table, or wall. Give each student his or her picture or name card. Ask each student to say his/her name and help them clap the syllables in his/her name (each syllable has one vowel sound). Then have the student place he picture and/or name card with the paper with dots that match the correct number of syllables in his word. Once all the children’s names are placed on the paper, clap the words in each number group.

Syllable Segmentation Picture Sort

Objective: children segment/clap the syllables in words

Materials: Picture cards, 4 pieces of paper marked with 1, 2, 3, or 4 dots

Activity: The games is very similar to the name sort game. Place the paper marked with dots on the floor or table. Give each student a picture. Name the picture for the student and help them clap the syllables in the word. Then have the student place his picture with the paper with dots that matches the correct number of syllables in his word. Once all the words are placed on a paper, clap the words in each number group.

Syllable Segmentation

Yummy, Yummy Objective: children clap the syllables of

words Materials: food pictures Activity: class chants, “Yummy, yummy,

rub your tummy, what’s a food you like to eat? Student chants: I like pop corn (student replies a food name, clapping the syllables as they are said).

Rhyme Awareness Hungry Thing

Objective: children listen to rhymes and begin to develop rhyme awareness

Materials: hand puppet, food picture cards Activity: Teacher passes out food picture cards

to each student. Hungry thing (puppet) is very hungry and says, “feed me!” Children respond with “What would you like to eat?” Hungry Thing answers, “I want rizza!” Teacher helps children find the food that rhymes with rizza and Hungry thing eats the pizza.

Syllable Deletion Take it away

Objective: children practice syllable deletion with compound words

Materials: two box grids, compound word pictures Activity: students say compound word represented

on picture. The teacher asks students to say the word again without the first or second part. Teachers use the box grids for visual cues. For example, teacher says, “Say cupcake. Say it again without saying cup.” The box grid is used for a visual cue.

Blending

Simon Says Objective: student practice syllable and

phoneme blending Materials: none Activity: teacher leads Simon Says

game: “Simon says, touch your shoul-der, el-bow, an-kle, bel-ly, h-e-a-d, n-o-se

Blending Say it Fast!

Objective: children blend syllables to make words and sounds to make words

Materials: multi-syllabic cards Activity: teacher explains that she is

going to talk funny (or slowly) and say a secret word. The kids can figure out the secret word, if they can say it fast. For example, the teacher says, “What’s the secret word, tor-na-do?”

Blending What’s in the Bag?

Objective: students improve their ability to synthesize words from their separate syllables.

Materials: bag with multi-syllabic toy items (barbie, guitar, bicycle…)

Activity: teacher explains that there are several items in the bag and they are to figure out the item by “saying it fast.” The teacher says the item syllable by syllable.

Phoneme Awareness Sound Introduction

Objective: phoneme awareness Materials: none Activity: teacher introduces the sounds

(a/z/m/t/) using a multi-sensory approach. The students learn to feel the sounds and determine how their mouth makes each sound. The students will focus on the placement of the tongue, teeth, and lips, as well as vocal cord vibrations and stop and continuous sounds.

A

Z

T

M

Beginning Sound Matching Beginning sound picture sort

Objective: beginning sound matching Materials: picture cards that begin with

sounds being introduced, sticky boards labeled with the sound/symbol at the top

Activity: the teacher presents a picture card to each student and asks her to “feel” the beginning sound. The pictures are sorted onto the appropriate “sticky board.”

Phonics

CVC phonics blending Objective: phonics and beginning

reading Materials: large sound/symbol cards with

the letters, a/z/m/t (with picture cues) Activity: teacher uses symbol cards to

help students sound out real and nonsense words

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