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Administration for Children and Families US Department of Health and Human Services
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Child's Hands Head Start Information and Publication Center

Head Start Child Outcomes Framework
Domain 2: Literacy

Domain Element: * Phonological Awareness

Indicators

Domain Element: *Book Knowledge and Appreciation

Indicators

Domain Element: * Print Awareness & Concepts

Indicators

Domain Element: Early Writing

Indicators

Domain Element: Alphabet Knowledge

Indicators

* Legislatively mandated

DOMAIN 2: LITERACY

     Literacy for children birth to five refers to the skills and abilities that are the forerunners of conventional reading and writing. Learning to read and write does not happen overnight. It is the result of many cumulative, interrelated experiences beginning at birth. Many different kinds of experiences are needed, but three are essential. Children need—

      Young children learn from experience. From the earliest days of life, they get messages from their environment about what is important and what has meaning. This is why all early childhood environments need to be rich in literacy enhancing materials and experiences. Literacy-rich environments are literally full of opportunities for reading and writing, but they are not overwhelming or overstimulating. Print should be used for real purposes or functions, not as clutter.

     It is important to note the strong connection between language development and early literacy (Dickinson & Tabors 2001). Although the Language Development and Literacy Domains are discussed separately here, they cannot be separated in actuality. Language— the more words children use and understand, and their familiarity with the full range of grammatical structures—is the foundation of reading and writing (i.e., literacy).

     Of course, children's learning in the Language Development and Literacy Domains cannot be separated from their learning in all other Domains. The content that they learn in mathematics, science, and other areas provides essential background knowledge and concepts that are necessary for literacy learning and later reading comprehension (the ability to make sense of what is read). Children's interests in various content areas can spark their conversation and opportunities for reading and writing. For example, preschoolers’ interest in family life (considered a social studies topic) can lead to many literacy related activities including drawing pictures and dictating stories about family celebrations, pets, and everyday events. Their curiosity and perseverance—that is, their approaches to learning—stimulate their language and literacy development and their learning across all other Domains.

     A primary goal of teaching is concept development. Young children need lots of first-hand experience with objects, events, and people as they learn new words to describe them. To fully develop concepts, children need to explore and manipulate using their senses and their bodies. In preschool, one important curriculum goal is to expand children's knowledge of the world. The curriculum should include many planned experiences such as field trips, experiments, projects, or visitors that expose children to important content. From these rich curriculum experiences, receptive and expressive language grows.

     Reading books, especially information or nonfiction books, also expands children's background knowledge. Play and projects help children use and expand their knowledge. Projects especially motivate children to "find things out" by doing research in books, asking adult experts, or using the Internet. Throughout the curriculum, teachers focus children's attention by asking questions that encourage children to observe carefully, make comparisons, or review past experiences. Because the ultimate goal of reading is making meaning from print, enhancing comprehension and background knowledge must be a focus of teaching from the very beginning.

     The Literacy Domain includes several mandated Domain Elements and Indicators that require particular attention on the part of education leaders and teaching teams.

* Domain Element: Phonological Awareness
     Phonological awareness is the understanding that the stream of spoken language is made up of smaller units of sound. Phonological awareness refers to the full range of awareness of the different size units of sound in spoken language. Figure 1 refers to the continuum of phonological awareness, representing the progression that most children go through in learning about how the sounds of words work. The journey toward phonological awareness begins with listening attentively to words, then organizing sounds into simple categories (by ending and beginning sounds), understanding the concept of words, manipulating the sounds (syllables) in words, and finally hearing the individual sounds (phonemes) in words. Making auditory discriminations is key to developing phonological awareness. (It is important, of course, that children's hearing impairments be detected early and appropriate treatment be provided if necessary.)

     Phonemes are the smallest units of sound in the spoken language. Phonemic awareness is part of the broader concept, phonological awareness. Phonemic awareness is the understanding that spoken words are made up of individual sounds. These sounds can be blended ("What word sounds like /r/ ‘ed’?") or segmented ("If I take away /t/ from tape, what word do I have?").

     Phonological awareness is the ability to focus attention on the sounds of spoken language rather than the meaning of the words (Yopp & Yopp 2000). This is a difficult task, especially for very young children. Because so much attention during early childhood is on helping children acquire vocabulary and understand meaning, developing phonological awareness requires special focus. For example, if you ask a five-year-old what sound the word "dog" starts with, the child might say, "Woof, woof" instead of /d/ (Yopp 2001). Of course, understanding the meaning of words is essential for young children, but becoming aware of the sounds of language is also important. It is not a choice between focusing either on meanings or sounds; we must do both to help prepare children for later success in reading and writing.

     In the English language, there are approximately 44 phonemes that are represented by the 26 letters of the alphabet either alone or in combination. For example, the word bat is made up of three phonemes: /b/, /a/, and /t/. If one phoneme is changed— /m/ instead of /b/, the meaning of the word is changed. Phonemes differ by language and also by regional dialects of the same language. Phonemes are important because these are the sounds that human beings have chosen to record in written language.

     Paying attention to the sound structure of language is an oral language skill involving hearing and listening, not a written skill. Phonological awareness is not phonics, which is a system of teaching the correspondences between letters or groups of letters and the sounds they represent.

     Phonological awareness has been found to be one of the most powerful predictors of later success in reading (Snow, Burns, & Griffin 1998). One study found that as much as 50% of the differences in reading outcomes at the end of second grade for former Head Start children was accounted for by differences in their phonological awareness assessed when they were in Head Start (Whitehurst & Lonigan 1998). Without phonological awareness, later instruction in phonics and decoding does not make sense because children do not discriminate the sounds of letters, words, and parts of words in the spoken language stream. If possible, the teaching team can help children develop phonological awareness in their home languages because most rhymes in English do not have the same meaning if translated directly.

     Like virtually every other early literacy skill, children do not automatically acquire phonological awareness. Teachers need to purposefully support children’s phonological awareness beginning in preschool. How they do this is equally important. Rather than lengthy periods of whole group instruction on sounds, there are many natural ways of supporting this important learning that are motivating for both children and teachers (Yopp & Yopp 2000) Teachers need to plan small group learning experiences too. It is helpful to keep the continuum of phonological awareness in mind when planning literacy-related learning experiences for Head Start children (Figure 1). Although not all children move through the progression sequentially, most do. Therefore, the earlier concepts are best taught before the later concepts are emphasized.

Hearing Sounds


     The continuum is like a stairway that children move along as they progress from a limited to far deeper understanding of how the sounds of words work. The steps are progressive for most, but not all, children. Some children hop ahead to master complex skills, only to have to return to grasp some seemingly easier ones. Activities for learning the continuum include:

STRATEGIES
To promote phonological awareness