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Alphabet Knowledge
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Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Alphabet Knowledge

Page 2: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided by the NEFEC

REACH Workshop Series Website. The information is a consolidation of professional learning presentations, current

research and teacher contributions.

The ERF REACH Lead Team is providing this early literacy information for early learning

educators and professional leaders. We have provided the most current research as well as practical application ideas and

suggestions for early learning educators to use in their classrooms. Please preview and adjust the information as

needed for the purposes of your audience.

Page 3: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Why is Alphabet Knowledge Important ?

A child’s ability to identify the letters of the alphabet by name is one of the best predictors of how readily he or she will learn to read.

Treiman, Kessler, & Pollo (2006)

Without firm knowledge of letters, children will have difficulty with all other aspects of early literacy.

Bradley & Stahl (2001)

Page 4: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Alphabet Knowledge is Important

Page 5: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

What Does it Mean to “Know” a Letter?

Letter-name knowledge• What letter is this?

Letter-shape recognition• Point to the letter “a”.

Letter-sound knowledge• What sound does this letter make?

Ability to print letters• Write the letter “a”.

Rapid letter naming• Name these letters as quickly as you can.

aBradley & Stahl (2001)

Page 6: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Attending to Features of Print

Children need to know that . . . Letters have features such as sticks, curves,

circles, tails, and tunnels. Orientation of letters is important. There is a specific way to form each letter. Each letter has a name and two forms

(uppercase and lowercase). Each letter is connected to at least one

sound.

Pinnell& Fountas (1998)

Page 7: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

How Should the Alphabet be Taught?

Alphabet knowledge is one of the least studied areas of literacy.

We know why it’s important, but there is limited agreement about what constitutes effective alphabet instruction (Piasta & Wagner, 2010).

Children can benefit from using their names as a springboard for learning the letters of the alphabet . Children recognize, read, and write their names earlier than other words (Bloodgood, 1999).

Children are familiar with the letters that make up their own name and are able to recognize the first letter of their name more easily than other letters of the alphabet. This concept has been termed own-name advantage (Treiman & Broderick, 1998).

Page 8: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

How Should the Alphabet Be Taught?

Children appear to use letter names to help learn and remember letter sounds (Treiman, et al., 2006).

Handwriting practice helps young children learn and recall letter shapes (Ehri & Roberts, 2006; Beringer, 1999).

Children learn alphabet letters most readily when the letters appear in meaningful settings (Neuman et al., 2000).

Page 9: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Writing Letters

Learning to form a letter is great support in learning the letter shape.

Forming letters does not have to be a pencil and paper task. Air writing Forming the letter in sand, rice, or shaving

cream Tracing sandpaper letters or outlined letters Sidewalk chalk may be easier for writing

before fine motor skills are ready for pencils

Page 10: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Writing Letters

The point is learning the correct way to form a letter—where to start, which direction to move, and where to end.

Instruction in letter formation should be about the process, not about the product.

Learning to form the letters correctly promotes handwriting fluency, which is linked with the quantity and quality of written expression.

Handwriting vs. Penmanship

Page 11: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Pre-Writing Center

The goal of a pre-writing center is to help children develop fine motor skills.

Page 12: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Letter Sounds

Children need to learn the sounds of letters so they can use them as they decode words.

As they decode, they need to be able to blend the sounds of letters.

So, we need to be sure the letter sounds we are teaching are blendable!

Page 13: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Embedding Alphabet Knowledge Throughout the Day

Page 14: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Small Group: Shared Reading Experience

Chanting story refrains Reading keywords Filling in predictable parts and phrases Echo reading

Morrow, Freitag, & Gambrell (2009)

Page 15: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Welcome

Daily NewsSign-In

Page 16: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Transitions: Center Song

Tune: "Where is Thumbkin?”

Teacher: Where is __________? Where is ________?

Child : Here I am.  Here I am.Teacher: How are you today, _________?Child : Very well, I thank you.Teacher: Choose a center. Choose a center

Page 17: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Recess

Without firm knowledge of letters, children will have difficulty with all other aspects of literacy (Bradley & Stahl, 2001).

Page 18: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Whole Group: Shared Writing Experience

Turns into……

Page 19: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Centers: Dramatic Play

Page 20: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Alphabet Center

Children need multiple opportunities “to manipulate and practice letters” (NCFL, 2009, 19).

Page 21: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

Child Made Alphabet Books

Page 22: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

ReferencesAdams, M. J. (1990). Beginning to read: Thinking and ;earning about

print. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Bloodgood, J. W. (1999). What's in a name? Children's name writing and

literacy acquisition. Reading Research Quarterly, 34(3), 342–367.Bradley, B. A., & Stahl, S. A. (2001). Learning the alphabet. Presented

at the National Reading Conference. http://www.ciera.org/library/presos/2001/2001nrc/01nrcstahl/01nrcsta.pdf

Gibson, E. P., Gibson, J. J., Pick, A. D., & Osser, H. (1962). A Developmental study of the discrimination of letter-like forms. Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 55, 897-906.

Justice, L. M., Pence, K., Bowles, R. B., & Wiggins, A. (2006). An investigation of four hypotheses concerning the order by which 4-year-old children learn the alphabet letters. Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 21(3), 374-389.

Page 23: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

References

Lane, H. B., Pullen, P. C., Hudson, R. F., & Konold, T. R. (2009). Identifying essential instructional components of literacy tutoring for struggling beginning readers. Literacy Research and Instruction, 48, 277-297.

Lonigan, C. (2004). Emergent literacy skills and family literacy. In Handbook of Family Literacy, edited by Barbara H. Wasik, 57-81. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

McGee, L. M. (2007). Transforming literacy practices in preschool: Research-based practices that give all children the opportunity to reach their potential as learners. NY, NY: Scholastic.

McGee, L. M., & D. J. Richgels. (1990). Literacy’s beginnings: Supporting young readers and writers. Boston, MA: Allyn and Bacon.

Page 24: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

References

National Research Council. (1998). Preventing reading difficulties in young children. Washington, DC: National Academies Press.

Neuman, S. B. (2006). N is for nonsensical. Educational Leadership, 64(2), 28-31.

Phillips, B. M., Clancy-Menchetti, J., & Lonigan, C. J. (2008). Successful phonological awareness instruction with preschool children: Lessons from the classroom. Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, 28(1), 3-17.

Piasta, S. B., & Wagner, R. K. (2010). Developing early literacy skills: A meta‐analysis of alphabet learning and instruction. Reading Research Quarterly, 45(1), 8–38.

Pinnell, G., & Fountas, I. (1998). Word matters. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

Schickedanz, J. A., & Casbergue, R. M. (2004). Writing in preschool: Learning to orchestrate meaning and marks. Newark, DE: International Reading Association.

Page 25: Alphabet Knowledge. THE NEFEC REACH PROJECT was funded by a grant through Early Reading First 2007-2011. The information in this PowerPoint is provided.

References

Morrow, L. M., Freitag, E., & Gambrell, L. B. (2009). Using children’s literature in preschool to develop comprehension. Newark, DE: International Reading Association.

Stahl, S. A., & Murray, B. A. (1994). Defining phonological awareness and Its relationship to early reading. Journal of Educational Psychology, 86(2), 221-234.

Treiman, R., & Broderick, V. (1998). What’s in a name: Children’s knowledge about the letters in their own names. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 70, 97–116.

Treiman, R., Kessler, B., & Pollo, T. C. (2006). Learning about the letter name subset of the vocabulary: Evidence from U.S. and Brazilian preschoolers. Applied Psycholinguistics, 27, 211‐227.

Whitehurst, G. J., & Lonigan, C. (1998). Child development and emergent Literacy. Child Development, 69(3), 848-872.

Whitehurst, G.J., & Lonigan, C.J. (2001). Emergent literacy: Development from prereaders to readers. In S. B. Neuman & D. K. Dickenson (Eds.), Handbook of Early Literacy Research (pp. 11 - 29). New York: Guilford Press.