Promoting Literacy Growth in Young Children
Dr. Sara Alexis Rutledge
Associate Professor of Early Childhood and Elementary Education
Mount Aloysius College
- Let kids see you read. Model reading behaviors and let children see you reading different types of materials (books, magazines, newspapers).
- Remember that it is never too early to read to children!
- Model how to care for books andhow to turn pages, read left to right, read top to bottom, etc.
- Make books together as a family or class (about trips, special events, etc.) Language experience stories Create a family or class scrapbook.
- Provide children with a print-richenvironment. Show examples of different kinds of books, puzzles, bath letters, refrigerator magnets, ABC blocks, etc.
- Read aloud everyday (board books, bath books, soft cover, lift-the-flap, interactive, touch and feel, rhyming books).
- Make books accessible around the house and classroom (small bookshelves or baskets)
- Respect your child's reading choices. Let them pick what they want to read.
- Read and reread favorite stories with predictable text. Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? and Chicka Chicka Boom Boom.
- Help your child create his or her own personallibrary.
- Label things around the house or classroom with the intention of building
vocabulary
- Share information from your own reading.
- Read the newspaper as a family or class(Mini Page).
- Encourage intergenerational reading.
- Act out with children what you read together.
- Go places and do things with children to build their background knowledge and vocabulary to give them a basis for understanding what they read.
- Tell stories. It's a fun way to teach values, pass on family history, and build your children's listening and thinking skills.
- Continue to read to older children even after they have learned to read by themselves.
- Encourage writing along with reading. Ask children to sign their artwork, add to your shopping list, make their own books and cards as gifts.
- Suggest practical reasons to read (shopping list, cooking, home repairs, crafts, menus).
- Take books where you go.
- Offer reading materials as a reward.
- Read in the car and listen to books on CD (Magna Doodles are great for the car).
- Encourage active reading where you child can ask you questions and share stories.
- Make connections among books.
- Join a Book-of -the-Month club or order from Scholastic take home sheets or Scholastic fairs. Use book orders in your classroom.
- At the dinner table talk a lot and let your children in on the conversation.
- Visit the public library or Barnes and Noble Bookstoresfor storytimes/activities and get your child their own library card.
- In the community, point out letters on billboards and trucks.
- Give your child a special place where he or she has a selection of materials to write with (an old desk is great).
- Encourage children to experiment with various writing materials (magna doodle, crayons, paper, paint, markers, pencils).
- Talk and sing to children during the day.
- Name what young children point to.
- As a family and a classhave fun with language- jokes, puns, etc.
- Have many different genres of literature available to children- fiction and non-fiction
Action, adventure, animals, autobiography, biography, humor, fantasy, how-to,
poetry, sports, etc.
- Make sure to have multicultural books (race, ethnicity, class, different types of families), books that support diversity of children with special needs, and gender-equitable books.
- Give books as presents!!! We love when our children get books as presents and we give books frequently a presents for our friends, nieces, and nephews
- Determine a special time to read to children- bedtime is great! At school or at a child care center make reading a special part of your day.
- Praise and encourage your child’s literacy attempts.
- Share wordless picture books with children.
- Finger paint with your child.
- Use a microphone to promote speaking abilities.
- Order monthly magazines for your child- they LOVE getting mail.
- Purchase literacy games such as Boggle Jr.
- Sing rhyming songs with your child to promote phonemic awareness.
- Take children to puppet shows.
- Ask children open-ended questions.
- Find activities related to stories you are reading- If You Give A Moose a Muffin- make muffins and read the recipe.
- Play with letter blocks.
- Create a chalkboard on a wall in your house or classroom(chalkboard paint) and purchase an easel with dry erase on one side and chalk on the other.
- Retell stories with a flannel board.
- Let children retell favorite stories with homemade puppets.
- Introduce children to computer software to supplement the reading you do with them- Jay Jay the Jet Plane: Sky Heroes to the Rescue. The AmericanAcademy of Pediatrics recommends waiting until children are 3 before introducing them to “screen time”.
- Listen to your child as they “read” and tell stories.
- Point out “environmental print”- Giant Eagle, STOP signs, etc.
- Dress as favorite characters from books- or even better have a “favorite children’s book character” birthday party. Call me- I’ll help you with it! What about “book themed” birthday parties? Examples: Little House on the Prairie and The Magic Tree House.
- Make use ofinteractive books- pop-ups, seek and find, life-the-flap, etc.
- Visit a storyteller at the library or community event.
- Have children’s book authors in your community sign books for your child.
- Write the alphabet in shaving cream, whipped cream, or sand.
- Get your child interested in predicting what will happen in the story.
- Take children to movies based on the book (The Polar Express, Charlotte’s Web) and then talk to them about the different e between the book and movie.
- Sing “finger-plays” and games.
- Supplement your reading time with LIMITED television viewing of literacy-rich shows such as Between the Lions.
- If possible, expose your child to the listening of different languages.
- Show young children the letters in their name.
- Be sure to have crayons, markers, colored pencils and other writing materials available to your child.
- When children get older (5 years old) use new words when you talk to your child (Mommy, its raining. It’s raining so hard it’s a downpour).
- Ask your child to tell you about their scribbles/drawings.
- Play games to teach your baby new words.
- Even with babies, you can take turns when you talk.
- Use letter cookie cutters for play-doh.
- Have toys around the house the support language development.
- Role-playing also boosts language development.
- Use magnet letters and a cookie sheet to make new words.
- Create a word wall in your home or classroom.
- Have FUN reading! Make it a happy time.