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Foundations for Literacy Instruction: Language, Reading, and Writing Skills

Explore the essential components of literacy instruction, including language development, phonological awareness, letter-sound correspondence, and stages of learning to read. Learn about factors that affect literacy acquisition and the model of silent reading comprehension.

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Foundations for Literacy Instruction: Language, Reading, and Writing Skills

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  1. SPCD 587 Week 2 Foundations for Literacy Instruction

  2. “It [reading] is a language skill. . .”(p. 191, Connors, 2003) Literacy Skills: Speaking/listening/ reading/writing Language Learn to use graphic symbols (letters) in conventional ways to encode or decode a message Sounds represent meaning Graphic or gestural symbols represent meaning Letter(s) represent sounds in words

  3. Typical Language Development Intentional Communication Preintentional Communication Symbolic Communication “Language is a complex and dynamic system of conventional symbols that is used in various modes for thought and communication.” (ASHA, 1983. p.4)

  4. Network Theories(e.g., Harm & Seidenberg) • As children are exposed to language, they develop phonological knowledge of the language they hear. They learn the phonological patterns of the language and incorporate them into a cognitive network. • Later, children learn letters and develop orthographic knowledge (typical patterns of letters in one’s language) which is mapped onto their phonological network. • Therefore, learning to read requires extensive experience with language and with print; associate print with words they have in their listening/speaking vocabulary.

  5. Alphabetic principle • Understanding that letters represent individual sounds in words (or combinations of letters) Vs.

  6. Stages/Phases of Learning to Read:Pre-alphabetic Phase (Ehri) Individuals in this stage: • Use “visual discrimination and associative learning” to identify words • Use visual cues and associate them with words they know • Make “little if any use of letter-sound correspondences”

  7. Partial Alphabetic Phase Individuals in this stage: • Have some knowledge of letter-sound correspondences and use one or more letters/sounds to identify a word (usually use first or first and last letters) • Are using some phonological awareness skills (b/c they are using “speech segments [letter-sounds]” to read words • Are using some context cues to read words

  8. Full Alphabetic Phase Individuals in this stage: • Know letter-sound correspondences quite well and are learning more complex correspondences • Can “sound out” new words • Can read by analogy (using larger “chunks” of phonological and graphemic info to decode) • Depend “heavily on phonological awareness, working memory, and access of phonological codes from long-term memory”

  9. Factors Affecting Acquisition of Literacy Skills • Environmental & Instructional • E.g., no or limited exposure to instruction or literacy experiences or materials; placement in classrooms with other children with significant language delays • Expectations • E.g., no or limited expectations that student can learn/participate in literacy (lack of opportunity) • Individual Differences • E.g., sensory, physical, communication, and/or cognitive differences making access difficult

  10. For children with ID, also consider • “Working memory may be the single most reliable predictor of reading ability among individuals with MR.” (Connors, 2003, p. 212)

  11. Model of Silent Reading Comprehension(K. Erickson, based on Cunningham, 1993) Language Comprehension Word Identification Knowledge of Text Structures Mediated Knowledge of the World Automatic Print Processing Eye movement Inner Speech Print-to-Meaning Links Integration

  12. Next Week • Finish up what we didn’t get to discuss tonight! • Begin looking as assessment. Read • Katims (2000) • Jennings et al. (2006) Ch. 3 & 4 • Get written permission for participation from parent/guardian for your student and begin compiling information for the Literacy History assignment

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