Introduction
As primary practitioners, understanding the gradual journey children take in becoming literate is imperative. These initial chapters on reading and writing in the Early Years have been included so that practice and pedagogy is informed by these developmental foundations (it is referred to as âEarly Years Foundation Stageâ for good reason). All teachers benefit from understanding good Early Years practice.
It is important to note that the Early Years phase of education, in England, stretches from birth to the age of five. In England, the Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS):
âŠsets the standards that all early years providers must meet to ensure that children learn and develop well and are kept healthy and safe. It promotes teaching and learning to ensure childrenâs âschool readinessâ and gives children the broad range of knowledge and skills that provide the right foundation for good future progress through school and life.
(DfE, 2017)
These four chapters will explore the key landmarks on a childâs journey to becoming literate. This chapter benefits from being read alongside Chapters 7 and 8, which are concerned with theory and practice in learning to read itself, including approaches to word reading.
An overview of the emergent reader
When children enter formal schooling, they will have already begun those initial steps to becoming a reader in their home and surrounding environments (McLachlan and Arrow, 2017). Yet, research has shown that the quality and quantity of these experiences will vary greatly (Goodman, 1986) with the greatest differences being connected to âphonological awareness, vocabulary and oral languageâ (Buckingham et al., 2013). These, along with several other factors, will affect the childâs reading readiness (see Tables 1.1 and 1.2).
With there being a direct correlation between early reading success and later academic success, it is our role to ensure that we give every child the chance to succeed (Langston, 2014; Court, 2017).
As emergent readers, each child will enter the Early Years setting â Nursery or Reception â at different developmental stages and, in relation to providing a supportive and engaging environment, we must provide developmentally appropriate activities, conversations and observations to assess and address them (Godwin and Perkins, 2002). Practitioners must keep in mind that a childâs reading journey is a personal one and that a balance between a skills-based scaffolded approach and the enjoyment of books provides holistic, contextualised and meaningful reading experiences which convince children of the purpose and pleasure behind reading. This is imperative for future reading success.
Table 1.1 illustrates that the journey to independent reading is an individual one, which is affected by social and cultural factors often outside of a teacherâs control. These begin from birth and continue throughout a childâs entire schooling.
Discovering childrenâs identities as readers is imperative in the Early Years setting and supporting them in seeing themselves as readers should be central to any pedagogical approach. Whatever their background or experience, a strong, supportive relationship between child, carer and setting ensures that all children have the best chance of success in the literate world.
Stop and Reflect
Gee (2004) refers to literacy as being âlinked into ways of talking, thinking, believing, knowing, acting, interacting, valuing and feelingâ.
How are we being asked to see the teaching of English here and how might it affect our pedagogy in the primary classroom?
Read Table 1.1 again, thinking closely about the different strands of early reading experience.
- What might the implications be for a child starting school who has not had the rich early-reading experiences outlined?
- How might a teacher or a school mitigate for this?
- What might be the implications for curriculum design?
- What might be the implications for classroom teaching?
Facilitative parents and conventional parents
For some children entering the Early Years setting, reading will already be associated with fun, pleasure and meaning making. Stories, information, songs, rhymes, jokes and forms of language play would have been shared throughout the day and be an integral part of bedtime routines. These shared, intimate experiences in which the adult is modelling the act of reading as something worth investing in will have a positive effect on the childâs in-school attitudes and reading readiness (Langston, 2014; Dobbs-Oates et al., 2015). They will also provide opportunities to extend alphabetic knowledge, show how print and picture both carry meaning by âpointing out wordsâ and pictures and understand a bookâs format and story structure (Sawyer et al., 2014; Hume et al., 2015). Booktalk around picturebooks has especially been associated with improving language development, âvocabulary and narrative skillsâ and reading fluency (Leech and Rowe, 2014).
In a US study which explored the relation between reading attitudes of parents and children in early childhood, Dobbs-Oates et al. (2015) placed the former in one of two categories: facilitative parents and conventional parents.
There is extensive research that shows the impact of parental attitudes to reading on their childâs emergent literacies (Barker et al., 2011). This is known to ...