Education.com

Early Literacy (page 3)

By E. Lilly|C. Green
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall
Updated on Jul 20, 2010

Critical Theory

Critical theory addresses the social and cultural backgrounds children bring with them when they come to school, and involves an understanding of the inequalities of certain groups in acquiring literacy (Freire, 1985; Gee, 1996). Young children from nonmainstream environments may have very different ways of “taking meaning” from the environment and from language than the mainstream population (Heath, 1983). Home literacy can take many forms that do not match the discourse of school communities (Taylor, 1997). Teachers who adhere to critical theory are sensitive to the ways some groups of children with diverse backgrounds “read the world” differently than mainstream children, putting them on an unequal footing in early literacy development (Freire, 1985). These teachers support a multicultural approach, address issues of social justice and nonviolence, and help children become critical thinkers and readers. Proponents of critical theory advocate social change and gender equality within the literacy curriculum (Shannon, 1998).

Emergent Literacy

The work of Marie Clay, a New Zealand educator, heralded changes in the way researchers and teachers viewed early reading. Her studies indicated that children know a great deal about reading and writing before they come to school, and they are able to experiment with and apply their knowledge in various ways (Clay, 1975). Reading readiness seemed to be an inaccurate term, since Clay’s research showed that there was not a specific sequence of skills children needed to master prior to reading and writing. The children she studied seemed instead to “emerge” into literacy—with writing, reading, and oral language abilities developing together.

Emergent literacy was recently defined as “the view that literacy learning begins at birth and is encouraged through participation with adults in meaningful activities; these literacy behaviors change and eventually become conventional over time” (Neuman, Copple, & Bredekamp, 2000, p. 123). From a very young age, children who are exposed to oral and written language gradually gain control over the forms of literacy. Print-related knowledge develops similarly to the way children learn oral language (Morrow, 1997). When children are actively engaged with interesting and meaningful reading and writing experiences, they develop literacy knowledge early in their lives.

 

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