Sunday, September 29, 2013

Three Simple Ways to Enable a Young Reader

Dear Parents:  
You are your child's first teacher.  Here are three simple ways to enable your young reader.

1) Practice nursery rhymes. 
2) Teach letter sounds with lowercase letters. 
3) Read to your child.  

It is that simple.  

Remind yourself to keep it simple and you will relish the results.

1) Teach your child nursery rhymes.

Rhymes help establish phonological awareness, critical in literacy development.

Sing nursery rhymes face to face.  The child needs to hear your voice, see your lips and interpret your expression.  A television does not have the same impact on the young brain as you.   The brain is an active and natural pattern decoder. Nursery rhymes establish patterns of the English language in the child's mind.


2) Teach your child letter sounds with lowercase letters.

Letter sounds with lowercase letters establish the *alphabetic principle and deepen understanding of phonemic awareness.

"Phonemic awareness instruction is most effective

Begin with incremental steps starting with letter sounds and lowercase letters.  Start with one lowercase letter symbol and one sound, the hard consonant or the short vowel.  The Montessori method and Core Knowledge Curriculum both begin with this simple shift, teaching letter sounds first.


(I recommend the Souns program for establishing letter-sound knowledge because it brings the abstract symbol used in literacy to life through play for the young learner.  However, if your means do not allow the purchase of a set, you can also practice letter sounds using a stick and some mud.)    

3)  Read to your child, face to face.

Reading, speaking and interacting directly with your child increases the child's vocabulary and comprehension.

Read to your child and talk about the book.   A student needs a robust vocabulary for success in literacy.

All you need is a library card to get started.


Follow these three guidelines for teaching at home before your child enters school, and your child will be ready to read. (Disclaimer:  Your child will probably already be decoding since you honored his/her analytic skills.)

*The alphabetic principle is the foundation needed for success in reading.  Surprisingly, the alphabetic principle has nothing to do with a letter name. Sing the alphabet song for dictionary skills needed down the road in school, but do not associate the symbol with the letter name in the beginning.  Simply focus on the letter sounds.

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Beyond Expectations

A few years ago, I received a quick reply from Rod Muth, my former adviser and now professor emeritus, that read, "Lots of work to do to make sure future schools really do the work that they should so that all kids learn beyond expectations!"  

Reflecting upon these two words changed the way I understand the profession, and became a driving force and path to clarity in understanding and navigating the complicated world of schooling, education and reform.

beyond expectations



the seed

a letter to my former student

don't rise to meet my expectations
go beyond them

drive past my wildest dreams and wave

on the highway to your destiny
stop only to look through that window
and
figure out how to fly
metaphorically
literally
poetically
fly

I'll let you flap your wings
I'll model how to fly
brush you off when you fall
And I'll watch you learn what you were born to do

go
amaze me
surprise me
teach us all

I'll be observing 
cheering you on
supporting you with the knowledge
 and revealing to you the skills that helped me


and tomorrow
you'll find me
bragging how I knew you then

Curriculum and Standards- The Difference

What is the difference between a curriculum and a set of standards?

In recent years, this has become a confusing question. 

Curriculum used to be the driving force in a classroom.  
Today, standards are the driving force.

It is more important than ever to distinguish and understand.

Standards are not curriculum. 




(Standards)


(Curriculum)


The illustration is one interpretation of the Teaching and Learning Cycle published on the Ohio Department of Education's Website.  

A curriculum outlines what the teacher is expected to teach. 


Standards are the minimal expectations students are expected to learn. 



The curriculum is the content.

Standards are the expectations. 


Teachers used to receive a curriculum and then set the standard.

Today, teachers receive a curriculum and the set standards.  


Upon assessment, standards determine if the student met the learning expectations.


Teachers used to determine if the student met the standard expectations using grades.  

Today, state assessments determine if the student has met the expectations. 


Steve Denning's article, "The Single Best Idea for Reforming K-12 Education" made the point of "Respecting Goodhart's Law. The current focus on testing has tended to make test results the goal of the system, rather than a measure. The change in goal means recognizing that a test is only measure. Using tests as the goal infringes Goodhart’s Law: when measure becomes the goal, it ceases to be an effective measure." 

So here is the question I am mulling, and I ask for your help...


Now that the Common Core State Standards are here, how can we use them for good measure in the classroom while respecting Goodhart's Law?

I welcome your thoughts.


Friday, September 6, 2013

Souns® and Rhymes

Souns and Rhymes class is family literacy at its best.
Parents or caregivers attend with children who are not yet in school. 

The design of this class is to establish a foundation so firm that no holes will ever appear in foundational literacy skills.  It's the simplicity that makes the impact profound.  Souns and Rhymes consists of two core elements: letter sounds and nursery rhymes.  The class is interactive and hands-on, bringing language and literacy to life.  

Goal of Souns Time: Establish the alphabetic principle through letter sounds needed for reading 
Goal of Rhyme Time: Establish phonemic and phonological awareness, critical in acquiring alphabetics.
jack and jill
What is Souns?
 “Souns is a hands-on early literacy program that teaches letter-sound associations through play.  The child is given the right information (letter sounds) at the right time (birth to three) in the right way (kinesthetically and incidentally.) This practice makes a powerful difference! ’

Rationale Using Neuroscience and Reading Research: 
“Phonemic Awareness and the Wise Mother Goose…  Tucked inside “Hickory, dickory dock, a mouse ran up the clock” and other rhymes can be found a host of potential aids to sound awareness- alliteration, assonance, rhyme, repetition. Alliterative and rhyming sounds teach the young ear that words can sound similar because they share a first or last sound”  (Wolf, 2007, p. 98-99).  



“…what can psychology and neuroscience recommend to teachers and parents who wish to optimize reading instruction? …we know that conversion of letters into sounds is the key stage in reading acquisition. All teaching efforts should be initially focused on a single goal, the grasp of the alphabetic principle whereby each letter or grapheme represents a phoneme” (Dehaene, 2009, p. 228).

The brain is wired to solve and is constantly searching for connections and patterns in the surrounding world.  Children make errors such as blowed and knowed more often than for any other kind of irregular verb.”  These errors are not made because of poor modeling.  The errors are made because the brain is wired for language. (Pinker, 2011, p. 72).

Rhyme time consists of reading and experiencing a nursery rhyme.  The nursery rhyme is repeated and the “main idea” of the rhyme is present and real for the child to experience.  The purpose is to establish phonemic and phonological awareness and the language code using rhythm, rhyme, repetition and realia.
References 
Dehaene, S. (2009). Reading in the brain: The science and evolution of a human invention. New York, NY.  Penguin Viking.
Liberman, I., Shankweiler, D & Liberman A. (1990). The alphabetic principle and learning to read. Haskins Laboratories Status Report on Speech Research. Retrieved March 29,2012 from http://www.haskins.yale.edu/sr/SR101/SR101_01.pdf
National Reading Panel. (2012). Report of the national reading panel: Teaching children to read reports of the subgroups Retrieved March 15, 2012, from http://www.nichd.nih.gov/publications/nrp/report.cfm
Pinker, S. (2011) Words and rules:  The ingredients of language. New York, NY. HarperCollins Publishers.
Research and Development Staff. (2000). Nursery rhymes and phonemic awareness Sadlier-Oxford A Division of William H. Sadlier, Inc Retrieved July 14, 2012, from http://www.isd300.k12.mn.us/ES/kinder/KINDERGARTEN%20INFORMATION/nursery%20rhymes%20handout.pdf
Robb, D. (2007). Ox, house, stick: The history of our alphabet. Watertown, MA. Charlesbridge Publishing, Inc.
Souns. (2010). Souns® for literacy, Language and literacy develop hand in hand. (White Paper) Retrieved October 24, 2011, from
http://souns.org/images/texts/whitepaperforwebsite1.pdfhttp://souns.org/images/texts/whitepaperforwebsite1.pdf
Wolf, M. (2007). Proust and the squid: The story and science of the reading brain. New York, NY. Harper Perennial.