Spelling suggestions: "subject:"early literacy"" "subject:"marly literacy""
31 |
Route-Finding: Developing Curricular Knowledge and Impacting Practice Through a Collaborative Curriculum Mapping ProcessReina, Laura J. 01 December 2018 (has links)
Research indicates curriculum mapping is beneficial for teachers and students. However, it is not effectively implemented because there are barriers in time, support, and knowledge. This research sought to remove those barriers and study the impact on teachers’ practice when they were able to work together to develop a curriculum map. The focus of the teachers’ map was the Kindergarten through third grade English Language Arts curriculum.
This work included a series of professional development sessions where teachers worked collaboratively to gain a greater understanding of the curriculum and develop a sequence from kindergarten through third grade. Teachers’ worked collaboratively to gain a deep understanding of what they were supposed to teach and how that would manifest in practice.
As teachers constructed their own understanding of the curriculum they made decisions about the expectations for students at each grade level and were able to discuss practices as a group. These discussions led teachers to be more intentional in their planning and instruction. They felt as though they had developed some consistency while still maintaining their freedom to teach within their classroom however they wanted.
I observed teachers in their classrooms and then met with them individually to talk about the impact of our work on their practice. Several ideas emerged. First, they saw a need for understanding of the content, and the value of gaining that knowledge as a group. They believed that their teaching would be more intentional as a result of our work and that this intentionality would make them higher quality reading teachers. They believed that increased intentionality, along with consistency from grade to grade and shared expectations had the potential to improve student achievement. Furthermore, teachers gained greater confidence from this work which could also improve their impact as teachers.
The community of practice was essential in moving teachers through this work as it provided them a trusting group with mutual goals and a willingness to support and challenge one another.It was essential that teachers first be able to work within a community of practice before they could traverse the journey of developing a curriculum map.
|
32 |
A Qualitative Analysis of Parental Motivations and Beliefs around Early Shared ReadingCrosh, Clare C. 05 October 2021 (has links)
No description available.
|
33 |
Survey of Reading Habits and Dialogic Book Reading Practices in Parents of Preschool-Aged ChildrenCronin, Kimberly 14 August 2023 (has links) (PDF)
This study explored the reading habits and dialogic book reading practices in parents of preschool-aged children. Early literacy practices in the home influence the development of language skills and academic learning of children. These practices were explored by directly by asking parents to reflect and report on their literacy habits in the home setting. It specifically addresses current reading behaviors that parents implement when reading with their child and observations of their child's attention and involvement during book-sharing sessions. This study was part of a larger study focusing on developing and implementing dialogic reading workshops for parents. A survey with 36 parent-report questions was distributed to parents across the United States via social media. Parents were asked to identify specific demographic variables and rate their perceptions of reading habits, interactive reading strategies used with their child, and library use. Following survey completion, 83 responses were analyzed. Key findings included consistent use of positive parent-child reading behaviors and the influence of parent characteristics. Parents consistently reported feeling confident or somewhat confident in reading with their child and consistent use of reading strategies in the home. Future research should study additional demographic variables. The results from this study will be used to inform a larger study of dialogic reading trainings with parents.
|
34 |
EFFECTIVENESS OF AN EARLY LITERACY PROGRAM FOR DIVERSE CHILDREN: AN EXAMINATION OF TEACHER-DIRECTED PATHS TO ACHIEVING LITERACY SUCCESSAnderson, Maren M. 06 July 2009 (has links)
No description available.
|
35 |
Exploring Teachers' Literacy and Language Supports during Writing in Prekindergarten and Kindergarten ClassroomsFarrow, JeanMarie January 2019 (has links)
Early writing ability for young children is essential for later literacy and academic achievement. Early writing, especially composing, with young children offers rich opportunities to foster both emergent literacy and language skills simultaneously, which may help boost overall growth for children in poverty. This study examines early writing supports of teachers in prekindergarten and kindergarten classrooms within an early writing framework that includes language, as well as literacy, supports during early writing instruction. Fifteen teachers’ writing instruction was examined during two instructional contexts: morning message and small-group in the fall of the school year. Results suggest that, in general, teachers used morning message to reinforce emergent literacy skills related to the alphabetic principle and concepts of print. Teachers’ language (i.e., translation) supports during writing were sparse. However, during small group writing activities, teachers’ supported child language related to pragmatics/discourse at higher rates, specifically, guiding children’s attention to topic. Additionally, a unique relation emerged between teachers embedding language supports within writing instruction to their overall global classroom quality. Results suggest that composing with young children may be an optimal context to support child language growth. Few teacher background or control factors were systematically linked to quality writing in the classroom; however, teachers who spoke using more complex syntax also used more abstract writing supports (i.e., explaining and connection), suggesting linguistic features may be connected to teacher approach during instruction. Implications for professional development are discussed. / Literacy & Learners
|
36 |
An Analysis of the Impact of Selected Structures of the Virginia Preschool Initiative on PALS Pre-K Program Summary Scores for At-Risk Preschool Students in VirginiaLeary, Patricia Wootten 27 July 2007 (has links)
This study examines the impact of selected structures of the Virginia Preschool Initiative on reading readiness in at-risk preschool students in the state of Virginia. The Virginia Preschool Initiative is designed to prepare at-risk four-year-olds for success in kindergarten. According to the Virginia Department of Education, "The purpose of the grants is to reduce disparities among young children upon formal school entry and to reduce or eliminate those risk factors that lead to early academic failure." (Virginia Department of Education, 2005) The independent variables are the specific curriculum models used by the school division, length of program day, teacher certification, and program sponsoring agency. The dependent variables are the pre and post assessment scores on the eight subtests of the PALS-PreK assessment. A paired sample t-test and one-way ANOVA were conducted using Fall and Spring 2006 PALS-PreK student assessment scores from school divisions that participated in the Virginia Preschool Initiative during the 2005-06 school year to determine the relationship between the curriculum implemented and PALS-PreK Fall and Spring student assessment scores. The findings in this study indicate a statistically significant difference between the Fall and Spring student assessment scores for each of the curriculum models analyzed and at least one curriculum model consistently underperforms the other three curriculum models. There were no differences in three variables (length of school day, teacher certification, and program sponsoring agency) and were therefore, not subject to analysis. / Ph. D.
|
37 |
Assessing early literacy development in Spanish speakers when Spanish is the language of instructionRhoades, William B. 03 1900 (has links)
xi, 89 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library catalog for the location and call number. / One of the fastest growing populations of students in American schools today is that of Spanish speaking English language learners. Many of these students are taught in classrooms in which Spanish is the language of instruction for the development of early literacy skills. There is a need for valid and reliable progress monitoring measures for Spanish speakers in these classrooms, as many of the current measures in use were designed for and normed on English speaking populations of students. Phonological awareness is one of the strongest predictors of success in learning to read. Therefore, the purpose of this replication study was to determine the efficacy of five independent variables: (a) Letter Sounds, (b) Syllable Sounds, (c) Phonemic Segmentation, (d) Syllable Segmentation, and (e) Grade Level to predict scores on Spanish Word Reading and Sentence Reading Fluency assessments for 41 first-grade and 41 second-grade native Spanish speaking students whose early literacy instruction was in Spanish.
Correlational and multiple regression analysis showed that, of these variables, performance on a test of Syllable Sounds was the best predictor of performance on both the Word Reading Fluency and Sentence Reading Fluency tests. Results show that, for students receiving early literacy instruction in Spanish, tests of syllable sounds demonstrated the most efficacy in accounting for the variance in predicting future reading success in Spanish. / Adviser: Gerald Tindal
|
38 |
Responsive Play: Exploring Play as Reader Response in a First Grade ClassroomFlint, Tori K. January 2016 (has links)
Play in the school setting is a highly contested issue in today's restrictive academic environment. Although many early childhood educators advocate the use of play in their classrooms and emphasize the importance of play for children's learning and development, children beyond the preschool and kindergarten years are not often afforded opportunities to learn through play in their classrooms. This eight-month study, conducted in a first grade classroom in the outskirts of the Phoenix Metropolitan area of Arizona, analyzed young children's playful responses to literature as they read various books together in the classroom context. The purpose of this study was to develop deep understandings about the affordances of play in response to text within a first grade classroom and to investigate the ways that children utilize play to respond to literature and to construct meaning. This dissertation is informed by these guiding research questions: What are the affordances of play for responding to text in a first grade classroom? 1. What are the sociocultural resources that children use to respond to text? 2. In what ways do first graders incorporate and utilize play to make meaning with texts and each other in the classroom? In order to answer these research questions, I utilized several theoretical frameworks including: sociocultural theories of learning and literacy, the role of play and imagination in development, funds of knowledge, and reader response theories. This study was also informed by recent research findings in the areas of play and culture and play and literacy. I implemented a classroom Reading Center wherein I studied children's cooperative reading transactions and play as reader response. I collected data through classroom observations and field notes, videotaped and transcribed transactions, audiotaped and transcribed conversations and interviews, artifact collection, teacher observations of responsive play, family home visits and interviews, and the use of family story backpacks. This data, analyzed through thematic analysis, the constant comparative method, and grounded theory, revealed rich information about the ways that children utilize play to respond to literature in the classroom setting. The findings of this study provide evidence to suggest that through their play as reader response, their responsive play, children create a social space in the classroom which connects official school literacy practices and academic instruction with their social play practices. In this new space, children's play and talk take central roles in their explorations and uses of literacy. Findings further suggest that play can be seen as a generative source of academic learning, that the notion of response in research and practice be reconceived in the field to include play as a valid and valued form of reader response, and suggest that further research be conducted on children's responsive play.
|
39 |
Adapting instruction to meet the individual needs of foundation phase readers and writersSwart, Marika 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEd)--University of Stellenbosch, 2011. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Current intervention programmes implemented in most Western Cape schools reflect the
use of isolated item-based literacy teaching methods. However, the low literacy levels in the
Western Cape primary grades do not indicate successful literacy learning. Therefore, this
study seeks to implement alternative approaches to fostering literacy comprehension, such
as socio-cognitive processing and constructivist approaches, which are more in line with
current research than the traditional items based models of literacy instruction.
The alternative, research-based methods were explored through the implementation of an
individualized contingent literacy intervention with emergent literacy learners. The
intervention took shape as a comparison between low progress learners, who participated in
the literacy intervention lessons, and average progress learners, who did not participate in
the literacy intervention lessons. The aim was to accelerate the low progress learners’
literacy learning so that they could reach the average-band performance of their classmates
after 12 weeks in the intervention. Data were gathered by means of observations of learners
and a Grade one teacher, an interview with the teacher and assessment results obtained in
a pre-mid-post-test design. In order to triangulate the results of the intervention, both
qualitative data and quantitative data were obtained and discussed. Based on qualitative
data, the intervention lessons proved to be successful, because observations indicated
positive change in the low progress learners’ reading and writing behaviours. Given the
small sample size, the overall trend in the quantitative data supported the value of the
intervention and indicated a need for extending the research beyond a pilot study. Further
research using larger sample sizes is thus recommended. More research is also needed to
obtain data on research-based interventions that are flexible enough to meet the diverse
needs of learners from different cultural backgrounds. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die meerderheid Wes-Kaapse skole maak gebruik van intervensie programme wat geskoei
is op die geïsoleerde item-geletterdheidsmetodes. Die lae geletterdheidsvlakke in die Wes-
Kaapse laerskool grade reflekteer egter nie positief op die metode wat tans gebruik word
nie. Daarom word hierdie studie onderneem met die oog op alternatiewe benaderings om
geletterdheid te bevorder en sodoende verbeterde leesbegrip tot gevolg sal hê. Die
benaderings ter sprake is sosio-kognitiewe prossessering en konstruktivistiese benaderings,
wat beide meer in gehoor is met huidge navorsing.
Deur alternatiwe navorsingsgebaseerde metodes, is ‘n individuele geletterdheid-intervensie
program ontwikkel vir ontluikende geletterdheidsleerders. Die intervensie is geïmplementeer
en gemeet deur middel van ‘n vergelyking tussen stadig vorderende leerders en gemiddeld
vorderende leerders, waarvan laasgenoemde nie in die intervensie lesse deelgeneem het
nie. Sodoende kan die impak onafhanklik vergelyk word. Die doel was om die stadig
vorderende leerders se geletterdheidsvlak te versnel ten einde dieselfde geletterdheidsvlak
van hul gemiddeld vorderende klasmaats binne 12 weke te behaal. Data is ingesamel deur
middel van observasies van die leerders en ‘n Graad 1 juffrou, ‘n onderhoud met die juffrou
en toetsresultate verkry in ‘n voor-middel-na-toets ontwerp. Om die resultate van die
intervensie interpreteerbaar te vergelyk, is beide kwalitatiewe en kwantitatiewe data
ingesamel en bespreek. Uit die kwalitatiewe data blyk dit dat die intervensie lesse suksesvol
was aangesien die observasies dui op ‘n positiewe lees en skryf gedragsverandering in die
stadig vorderende leerders. Met die klein steekproef van leerders betrokke, was die
algemene tendens van die kwantitatiewe data dat die intervensie wel waardevol was, maar
dat verdere studies met groter steekproef groepe noodsaaklik is. Verdere navorsing t.o.v.
die insameling van data vir navorsingsgebaseerde intervensies is nodig. Hierdie data
insameling en evaluasie tegnieke moet die diverse behoeftes van leerders, afkomstig van ‘n
verskeidenheid agtergronde, in ag neem en akkomodeer om resultate vergelykbaar te maak.
|
40 |
Reading recovery : investigating differential effects on the literacy development of young children for whom English is an additional language in comparison with their native speaking peersClancy, Charlotte M. January 2014 (has links)
This thesis studied young, struggling readers, all of whom had participated in the Reading Recovery literacy intervention, and investigated whether differential progress was made by children learning English as an additional language when compared with their native, English-speaking peers. The children were assessed on a pre- and post-test basis on literacy measures associated with reading comprehension in a UK context. Following a Pilot Phase, 52 children who were learning English as an additional language, and 48 native, English-speaking children were recruited from twenty-three primary schools in 8 local authorities across the UK. The children were administered standardised literacy measures, including the British Abilities Scale (BAS) single word reading test, the British Picture Vocabulary Scales (BPVS) vocabulary knowledge test, the Phonological Assessment Battery (PHAB) pseudo-word reading test, and two reading comprehension measures: the Wechsler Individual Achievement Test (WIAT) and the York Assessment of Reading for Comprehension (YARC). Statistical analyses were conducted on the data and the results indicated that differential progress was made by the groups, after initial levels of decoding or vocabulary were covaried. The first research question investigated the differential progress made by the two groups, and over the course of the intervention, the EAL children made more progress after controlling for initial skills at entry. After controlling for initial vocabulary levels, the EAL group made more gains than their NS peers, as measured by the BAS single word reading assessment. The second research question examined differential predictors of reading comprehension, and multiple regression analyses showed that vocabulary was a stronger predictor for EAL learners, whereas decoding was found to be a stronger predictor for NS learners. The findings suggest that it is important to develop the vocabulary abilities of EAL learners, as the relationship between vocabulary knowledge and reading comprehension acquisition was found to be stronger for this group than for the NS group. The findings also suggest that NS children’s decoding abilities must be supported, as the relationship between single word reading and the acquisition of reading comprehension was found to be stronger for this group than for the EAL group.
|
Page generated in 0.0754 seconds