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Linking Literacy and Language with Social and Emotional Learning (page 3)

By Donna Bryant, Ph.D.
Committee for Children

The Technique

A video that Dr. Whitehurst made explains that the acronym PEER can help an adult remember what to say when reading to children:

  • PROMPT the child to say something about the book or page (for example, "What's this? Tell me about this page").
  • EVALUATE the child's response (for example, "Yes, 'mad' is one answer, but what do you think he was mad about?").
  • EXPAND the child's response by adding information to it (for example, "His mother had been worried that he was lost").
  • REPEAT the child's response to make sure the child has learned something from it.

The PEER sequence can be used while reading almost every page of a book. Another acronym, CROWD, reminds teachers of the five main types of prompts:

  • COMPLETION: Leave a blank at the end of the prompt and let the child fill it in.
  • RECALL: Ask questions about what happened on the page that's just been read. Recall questions can also be asked at the end of a book to summarize the action or main point. (This is a good memory challenge.)
  • OPEN-ENDED: Ask a question about the picture on the page (for example, "What is happening here?").
  • W PROMPTS: Ask what, when, where, why, and how questions. Focus on the pictures. W prompts teach children new vocabulary by letting them repeat words in the book.
  • DISTANCING: Ask children to relate the pictures or words to their own life experiences. Distancing questions help children with verbal fluency, conversation abilities, and narrative skills (for example, "Tell me about a time you felt afraid").

Small Group Challenges

We've found that the most challenging obstacle to implementing dialogic reading is finding a way to conduct the sessions with small groups of five to six children.

We thought the teacher could conduct three or four short (10–15 minute) shared reading sessions during center time. The assistant teacher could supervise the other children playing in centers while the teacher works on reading. However, many teachers think that they'll lose control of the class if they stay in a corner reading to small groups.

Making the assistant teacher the designated "shared-reading leader" could be one solution. This option has worked in some classes, but assistant teachers are often not available since their attention is drawn to many other tasks.

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