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Start
Early, Finish Strong: How to Help Every Child
Become a Reader - July 1999
Ready to
Read
Building
Skills Through Early Care and Education
As the 20th century nears its end, it is a
fact of American family life that young
children spend a substantial part of their
days in the care of someone other than a
parent. More than 13 million infants,
toddlers, and preschoolers receive regular
care from adults other than their
parents—roughly six out of 10 children under
age 6 who are not enrolled in kindergarten
(U.S. Department of Education, OERI, 1996).
According to the University of Michigan’s
Institute for Social Research, the average
number of hours spent per week by children
ages 3 to 5 in school settings nearly doubled
from 11.5 hours in 1981 to 20 hours in 1997 (Hofferth,
1998).
The National Center for the Early Childhood
Work Force estimates that 3 million people
provided child care in 1998. The U.S.
Department of Labor has projected the need for
nearly 300,000 new child care workers between
1996 and 2006, making the occupation among the
10 fastest-growing in the nation.
These statistics give us important
information for winning the war against
illiteracy. For some children, the support of
parents and elementary school teachers is not
enough. While most parents are eager to learn
more about early childhood development and
education, work and family pressures strain
their time and resources. Elementary school
teachers do not even meet children until well
after key periods have passed for cognitive
and language development.
Architects of Reading Success
If we are serious about starting early to
create a nation of readers, then we must do
more to enlist the burgeoning corps of adults
who work in early care and education—in
preschools, child care centers, nursery
schools, and home-based care settings. We must
also address the reality that many of these
early care and education providers need
assistance with basic skills and training to
fulfill their potential. As a nation, we must
acknowledge that these Americans are not just
children’s caretakers. They are architects
of foundations that are critical for reading
and academic success.
Many studies have established that
high-quality early care and education lay the
foundation for school success by enhancing
cognitive and language development, as well as
social and emotional competence (National
Institute for Child Health and Development,
1997). More specifically, the 1998 National
Research Council report found that early
childhood programs can contribute to the prevention
of reading difficulties. These programs
contribute by providing young children with
enriched, research-based literacy
environments, and by identifying and removing
possible obstacles to reading success.
Unfortunately, fulfilling the promise of
early education is easier to imagine than to
realize. By the time they enter kindergarten,
most children have experienced some kind of
early education or child care. But access to
this care, as well as the quality of care,
varies greatly. Children from low-income
families, who are most apt to benefit from
early intervention, are the least
likely to attend preschool. In fact, the
preschool participation gap between rich and
poor has actually widened over the past two
decades (National Education Goals Panel,
1997).
When we fail to make the most of this
important period in young children’s lives,
we set the stage for later difficulties.
Kindergarten teachers have estimated that 35
percent of America’s children start school
unprepared to learn (Boyer, 1991). In 1998,
teachers in another national survey reported
that about half of all children have problems
making the transition to kindergarten
(National Center for Early Childhood
Development and Learning, 1998). Many of these
children will have difficulty learning to
read.
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Bright
Beginnings, Charlotte, NC |
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Bright Beginnings is a
public pre-kindergarten
program in North Carolina’s
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Public
Schools. Focused on literacy,
the program provides
4-year-olds with a
literacy-rich, resource-rich,
full-day school experience.
Each school day is constructed
around four 15-minute literacy
circles, where teachers engage
children in reading and
literacy activities.
The school district has
developed its own
pre-kindergarten curriculum,
content standards, and
performance expectations that
set high goals for every
child. Pre-kindergarten
standards have been developed
in the areas of social and
personal development, language
and literacy, mathematical
thinking, scientific thinking,
social studies, the creative
arts, physical development,
and technology.
Supported mainly through
federal Title I funds, the
program currently serves more
than 1,900 children.
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Plans call for reaching all
4,000 children in the school
district who need high-quality
preschool experiences to get
ready for school.
The district collaborates
with Head Start, special
education, and other public
and private partners. All
teachers are early childhood
specialists with at least a
four-year degree and are
certified to teach by the
state.
Bright Beginnings serves
only eligible children who are
selected according to federal
funding guidelines. An initial
program evaluation shows
promising outcomes.
Contact: Tony
Bucci, Ellen Edmonds, Barbara
Pellin
Charlotte-Mecklenburg
School District
701 East 2nd Street
Charlotte, NC 28202
(704) 379-7111
www.cms.k12.nc.us/k12/curricul/prek/index.htm
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More Children in Child Care
The opportunities for early care and
education to help—or hinder—America’s
victory in the war against illiteracy have
multiplied with the expansion of child care
services. Much of this demand has been fueled
by the tremendous expansion of women’s roles
in the workforce. The percentage of mothers of
infants and toddlers working outside the home
has nearly tripled from 21 percent in
1965 to 59 percent in 1994 (Shore, 1997).
But even among households in which the
mother is not employed, one-third use regular
child care for their youngest children (U.S.
Department of Education, OERI, 1996).
Preschoolers spend an average of 35 hours a
week in child care if their mothers work
outside the home, and 20 hours per week if
their mothers are not employed (Shore, 1997).
Child care starts early: 45 percent of
infants under age 1 are regularly cared for by
someone other than a parent, most by a
relative in a private home. As babies grow,
their chance of being cared for by
non-parental adults also grows, from 50
percent of 1-year-olds to 84 percent of
5-year-olds. Similarly, the percentage cared
for outside of private homes grows from 11
percent of 1-year-olds to 75 percent of
5-year-olds (U.S. Department of Education,
OERI, 1996). Thus, an enormous potential
exists for early childhood providers to
influence later reading success.
Choices in Child Care
Individual and cultural preferences
influence family choices about the use of
early childhood programs. More than six out of
10 Black children (66 percent) and White
children (62 percent) receive supplemental
care and education, compared with 46 percent
of Hispanic children. There are also wide
income differences in families’ child care
patterns: only half of all households with
incomes of $30,000 or less use child care,
compared with three-quarters of households
with incomes of $50,000 or more (U.S.
Department of Education, 1996).
Besides influencing whether families use
child care at all, income also influences the type
of care that families select. This has
significance for the war against illiteracy:
the care families choose makes a difference.
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Building
Literacy Through the Arts in
Early Childhood |
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The Arts Education
Partnership, representing more
than 100 national
organizations, researched the
role of the arts in early
childhood. The study
identifies the best kinds of
experiences for babies,
toddlers, preschoolers, and
young elementary school
students to build cognitive,
motor, language, and
social-emotional development.
Under the philosophy that
play is the business of young
children, the partnership
study found that the arts
engage children in learning,
stimulate memory, and
facilitate understanding.
Role-playing games, poems,
songs, rhyming, dramatic
storytelling, and other
creative arts play can develop
language skills and a love of
learning.
The study’s report, Young
Children in the Arts,
includes developmental
benchmarks and appropriate
arts activities for children
from birth to age 8. Parents
and adult caregivers are
encouraged to use
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character voices and
dramatic gestures when reading
or telling stories and to make
sock puppets to increase the
enjoyment of the tale.
Show-and-tell stories can be
created with photographs, and
young children can pantomime
their favorite book characters
before a mirror. Older
children can write poems and
improvise stories with simple
costumes.
Resources, research, and
programs are available through
the database of the Wolf Trap
Institute for Early Learning
Through the Arts at www.wolftrap.org.
Contact:
Arts Education Partnership
Council of Chief State
School Officers
One Massachusetts Avenue,
NW
Suite 700
Washington, DC 20001-1431
(202) 326-8693
Fax: (202) 408-8076
aep@ccsso.org
http://aep-arts.org
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The Limitations of Income
In addition to having greater access to
regulated care, higher-income families are
much more likely to use center-based
care—nursery schools, child care centers,
and preschools—than are lower-income
families (National Education Goals Panel,
1995; West et al., 1995). In low-income
neighborhoods, the supply of any kind of
regulated child care, whether in centers or
family child care homes, is usually inadequate
(Siegel & Loman, 1991).
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A
Jump Start
Jumpstart recruits college students
to help children who are struggling in
preschool. The mentors are paired for
almost two years with 3- and 4-year-olds
in Head Start or other programs for
children living in poverty. The
Jumpstart mentors work one-on-one with
children to teach and reinforce basic
academic and social skills.
Jumpstart forms partnerships with
early childhood caregivers and involves
families in their preschooler’s
development. The summer program provides
an intensive preschool experience for
young children during the two months
before kindergarten.
Jumpstart serves children in Boston;
New Haven, Connecticut; New York City;
Washington D.C.; Los Angeles; and San
Francisco. The program aims to engage
1,000 college students as mentors by the
year 2000 and to reach more than 12,000
children. Mentors may receive stipends
or wages through AmeriCorps or the
Federal Work-Study program.
Contact:
Jumpstart
93 Summer Street, 2nd Floor
Boston, MA 02110
(617) 542-JUMP
Fax: (617) 542-2557
www.jstart.org
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This lack of options increases the number
of poor children in unlicensed family child
care or relative care (Fuller & Liang,
1995; Love & Kisker, 1996). Research shows
that, in general, unlicensed care arrangements
are of lower quality than licensed centers or
homes (Cost, Quality and Child Outcomes Study
Team, 1995; Kontos et al., 1994). Among those
who offer services in a private home, 50
percent of non-regulated providers have been
found to offer inadequate care, compared with
about 13 percent of regulated providers
(Families and Work Institute, 1994).
Advantages of Center-based Care
Although many families prefer family child
care arrangements for their home-like
atmosphere and small numbers of children,
center-based care is the preference of most
families for their older, preschool children (Leibowitz
et al., 1988). Because centers are designed to
serve larger groups of children, they often
offer greater resources for preschoolers’
literacy development, such as books,
tapes, and computers.
Additionally, a recent multi-site study
found that center care is associated with
better cognitive and language outcomes and a
higher level of school readiness, compared
with outcomes in other settings of comparable
quality (National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development, 1997b). But not all
center-based care is equal. Children who
attended centers that met professional
guidelines for child-staff ratios, group
sizes, and teacher education had better
language comprehension and school readiness
than did children enrolled in centers without
these standards.
But the doors to high-quality early care
and education are often closed to low-income
families, either because of cost or location.
These barriers result in many poor children
entering school without the early educational
choices available to their affluent
classmates, placing them at greater risk of
reading difficulties.
Low Funding, Low Quality
Child care providers have struggled to
satisfy the demand for services.
Unfortunately, this struggle has resulted in
the chronic, twin calamities of low wages and
high employee turnover. The under-funding of
early care and education—including fees,
subsidies, and donations—is acknowledged to
be the chief cause of low quality (Gomby et
al., 1996; National Education Association,
1998).
Both parents and child care teachers bear
the burden of the current inadequate funding
system. Clearly, parent fees put high-quality
early care and education out of reach for many
working families. Yet, this system also
perpetuates low salaries, which fail to
attract and retain highly skilled teachers.
The impact is negative for all
involved—child care providers, families, and
children—and ultimately, for our nation as
well. Low-quality early care and education put
children’s development at risk, including
the development of abilities associated with
reading success.
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The
Gardner Children's Center, San
Jose, CA |
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For this bustling child
care center, serving children
from 6 weeks old through
seventh grade, literacy is the
foundation of all learning.
Each child is read to daily.
Lesson plans are based on
“Ten Best Books,” which
each teacher chooses to ensure
that all children learn the
joy of reading. Every
classroom has a designated
reading area, and both
pre-kindergarten and
school-age children regularly
visit the Biblioteca (the
Spanish language library) for
story hour and book selection.
Teachers aim to make visiting
the library a lifelong habit.
The Gardner Children’s
Center also reaches out to
families to promote literacy.
At orientation, all parents
are given a book in their home
language and coached on the
importance of reading to and
with their
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children. These messages
are reinforced at parent
conferences twice a year. A
family literacy night is
celebrated through a
partnership with the local
public television station.
Also, parents learn to
share literacy activities at
home with their children in
English and Spanish.
Children’s books are
distributed at the annual
health fair. At holiday time,
every child enrolled in the
program, and each sibling,
receives at least one book as
a gift. The total environment
communicates the value and joy
of reading.
Contact:
Frederick Ferrer, Director
Gardner Children’s
Center Inc.
611 Willis Avenue
San Jose, CA 95125
(408) 998-1343
www.gardnerchildren.com
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In 1989, a national study reported that the
quality in most child care centers was
“barely adequate” (National Center for the
Early Childhood Workforce, 1989). In 1999, the
National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development (NICHD) found that fewer than 10
percent of American youngsters ages 3 and
under are likely to receive “excellent”
care (Booth, 1999). About 20 percent of child
care centers are estimated to provide unsafe
and unhealthy care (Shore, 1997). The 1995
Cost, Quality, and Child Outcomes Study found
that child care at most centers is poor to
mediocre, and almost half of infant and
toddler care may be detrimental. The recent
NICHD study found that 61 percent of child
care arrangements—including centers, family
child care homes, in-home sitters, and
relative care—to be poor to fair quality
(Booth, 1999).
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Six
for Success!
Both child development theory and
research on successful practices point
to six key features of high-quality
early care and education programs:
- 1. High staff-child
ratios
- 2. Small group sizes
- Adequate staff
education and training
- Low staff turnover
- Curriculum emphasizing
child-initiated, active learning
- Parent involvement
Source: National Education
Association, 1998
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The States Take Action
Many states are taking action aimed at
improving child care quality, in part because
a growing amount of public money is being
spent on child care. Although states
traditionally spend the lion’s share of
funds for children on elementary and secondary
education, states increased expenditures on
child care by 55 percent between 1996 and 1998
(National Governors’ Association, 1998).
This investment is important not only to
meet the demands of the marketplace but also,
if the quality of care is high, to put more
children on the path to school success. Thus,
quality improvement efforts must attend to
children’s development—cognitive,
language, social, and emotional—as well as
reduce risks of physical harm.
Forty-four states reported to the National
Governors’ Association that they were
working on child care quality issues in 1998.
One positive trend finds 16 states paying
higher reimbursements to child care providers
who meet higher quality standards.
Fortunately, reforms to boost health and
safety often parallel reforms that can improve
opportunities for cognitive and language
development.
For example, improving child-staff ratios
and requiring smaller class sizes enables
teachers to have individual conversations,
read with small groups, and implement
classroom practices that research shows are
necessary to promote literacy and later school
success (Cost, Quality and Child Outcomes
Study Team, 1995). Research also has found
that favorable adult-child ratios increase
children’s imitation of adults and increase
children’s verbal interactions (National
Education Association, 1998). Despite this
evidence, only 18 states maintain requirements
for a 10-to-1 ratio throughout the preschool
years, and some states allow ratios twice
as high (General Accounting Office, 1998).
Quality of Early Childhood Teachers
Whether they work in child care, preschool,
or public school, research consistently shows
that the quality of teachers is the key to
quality education. This is especially true in
the early years.
A national study found that when child care
providers had more years of education and more
college-level early education training, they
provided more sensitive, developmentally
appropriate care to children (Cost, Quality
and Child Outcomes Study Team, 1995). Higher
education and specialized training also allow
early childhood teachers to do a better job of
advancing children’s language skills, a key
predictor of later reading success (Whitebook
et al., 1990).
But not all child care teachers get the
professional preparation they need. In a study
for the U.S. Department of Education, 93
percent of child care teachers reported having
some child-related training, but only 36
percent had formal, college-level teacher
preparation, and only 24 percent held a
credential from a professional organization.
Among home-based providers, only 64 percent
reported any child-related training and just 6
percent were accredited by a professional
organization (Kisker et al., 1991).
Early childhood teachers find little
incentive under current state requirements to
prepare themselves better to support literacy
development. The National Association for the
Education of Young Children (NAEYC) recommends
that all early care and education teachers
have formal training at the bachelor’s
level, but most states require that child care
workers hold only a high school diploma. Only
nine states require any college credit in
early childhood for child care center
teachers. Only two—Hawaii and Rhode
Island—require a bachelor’s degree in any
field with specialized training in early care
and education (Azer & Eldred, 1998).
Just as improvements in child-staff ratios
and class size benefit all areas of
children’s development, more professional
training opportunities and higher standards
for early childhood teachers would enhance
children’s growth, including their
preparation to be successful readers.
Efforts to Improve
Small but promising steps have been taken
to enhance the professional preparation of
early childhood teachers. One study showed
that even a modest increase in high-quality
training can benefit children.
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A
Family Place
The Family Place Library recruits
child care providers to bring children
to the library for learning fun. This
library also provides Storytime Kits for
child care providers to use in their
homes. The kits include books, videos,
puzzles, puppets, and activities.
Educational toys, including adaptive
toys for children with disabilities, can
also be borrowed.
This program offers learning
opportunities based on family strengths,
cultures, and interests.
The Family Place Library, a joint
venture between New York’s Middle
Country Public Library and Libraries for
the Future, is funded by the Hasbro
Children’s Foundation. Family Place
Library is a national project operating
programs in six communities.
Contact:
Sandy Feinberg
Middle Country Public Library
(516) 585-9393, ext. 200
feinberg@mcpl.lib.ny.us
www.mcpl.lib.ny.us
Libraries for the Future
(212) 352-2330
www.lff.org
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These researchers found that even 18 to 36
hours of training for family child care
providers resulted in improved caregiving
environments and stronger relationships
between adults and children. A taste of
professional development also whetted the
participants’ appetites—after completing
the training, 95 percent of the providers said
they wanted more instruction (Galinsky et al.,
1995).
However promising, this level of
preparation does not approach what is needed
to provide our youngest child-ren with the
foundations for healthy development. More
comprehensive approaches to training can
strengthen the early childhood work force. The
Council for Early Childhood Professional
Recognition offers a Child Development
Associate (CDA) credential, which is used as
one of the standards in the licensing of child
care teachers and center directors in 46
states and the District of Columbia. The
credential calls for a high school diploma,
120 hours of training in specified categories,
and 480 hours of experience, along with a
formal assessment procedure.
With leadership from Wheelock College’s
Center for Career Development in Early Care
and Education, many states are developing more
coherent early childhood training systems,
with increased collaboration between higher
education institutions and community partners.
Other state efforts include the T.E.A.C.H.
project (Teacher Education and Compensation
Helps). In North Carolina and a small number
of other states, this innovative project
provides college scholarships for early
childhood teachers, administrators, and family
child care providers. Completion of the
program leads to higher compensation.
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A
New Option for Certification
in Child Development |
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The U.S. Department of
Labor’s Bureau of
Apprenticeship and Training
(BAT) is taking a
collaborative approach to
credentialling child care
providers. Through BAT’s
partnership with the state of
West Virginia’s
apprenticeship program,
candidates who take four
semesters of college courses
and get 4,000 hours of
on-the-job training receive
certification from the U.S.
Department of Labor as a Child
Development Specialist.
Hundreds of providers have
graduated from the program,
and many hundreds more are
actively pursuing completion
of the requirements. Florida,
Minnesota, and Maine have
followed suit, with Maine
requiring six semesters of
college courses.
The program draws on core
teams of educators, health
professionals, parents, and
employers. The system creates
a career ladder for child care
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providers who earn their
salaries while in the program
and receive incremental wage
increases as their skills,
abilities, and knowledge
increase.
Employers report almost no
turnover among participating
providers, and the providers
report high satisfaction with
their careers. Plans are under
way to launch similar projects
in 10 more states in 1999.
Contact:
Dana Daugherty
U.S. Department of Labor
Bureau of Apprenticeship
& Training
Child Care Development
Specialist Registered
Apprentice Program
200 Constitution Avenue,
NW
Washington, DC 20210
(202) 219-5921
www.doleta.gov/bat
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These promising trends are consistent with
recommendations by experts in the field. The Not
By Chance report (Kagan & Cohen,
1997) summarizes four years of discussions by
early childhood and policy experts. They
recommend that every person employed in early
care and education programs hold an individual
license to practice, based on demanding
standards of education and training.
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Licensing
Priorities
Hairdressers in more than 40 states
are required to have between 1,000 and
2,100 hours of training at an accredited
school to get a license (BeautyTech,
1999). Yet 39 states and the District of
Columbia do not require child care
providers to have any early childhood
training prior to taking children into
their homes (Azer & Caprano, 1997).
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In the literacy area alone, the 1998
National Research Council’s report sets
forth a long list of in-depth knowledge and
skills that all early childhood educators must
have if children are to enter school ready to
become successful readers.
The Orton Dyslexia Society calls for all
preschool and kindergarten teachers to be able
to, at minimum: stimulate oral expressive
language, language comprehension, and print
awareness; foster phonological awareness and
recognition of the links between sounds and
letters; and identify language problems of
children at risk for reading difficulty.
One-shot workshops and minimal training
requirements will not be enough to produce the
skilled professionals needed to support
children’s language and literacy
development.
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Books
Aloud: A Child Care Experiment |
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A recent study called Books
Aloud, in and around
Philadelphia, found that
children’s early literacy
skills can be enhanced by
simultaneously flooding child
care centers with books and
training caregivers to read
aloud (Neuman, in press).
This $2 million study,
funded by the William Penn
Foundation, targeted more than
330 child care centers serving
more than 17,000 low-income
children. Centers were flooded
with nearly 90,000 books—an
average of five new,
high-quality books per child.
At the start of the study,
more centers had TVs than
library nooks; the majority
had neither. The centers had
negligible funding for
supplies, so the books they
did have were in shabby
condition.
Research has found that
talk between adults and
children in some child care
settings can be dominated by
imperatives—adults telling
children what to do (Cost,
Quality and Child Outcomes
Study Team, 1995). The Books
Aloud teachers received 10
hours of training from
preschool specialists on how
to enrich the language and
literacy opportunities they
offered to children.
Caregivers were shown that, in
addition to being fun, reading
aloud also teaches
childrenabout vocabulary,
narrative structure, and the
relationship between spoken
and printed words.
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Child care teachers were
encouraged to designate a
reading area in their center
and storytime in their
schedule. They were coached on
how to prepare for storytime
and extend the concepts of the
book through discussions,
questions, and hands-on
activities, such as puppets.
The frequency of literacy
interactions between adults
and children, such as talking
about stories and developing
skills through singing,
counting, and rhyming, doubled
over seven months. Teachers
regarded reading aloud as an
opportunity for interactive
learning. This increased the
children’s motivation,
interest, and reading time.
Books Aloud children
frequently asked to be read
to, pretended to read, and
played with books during their
free time more often than
similar children who were not
in the program. Books Aloud
children outperformed their
peers in specific abilities
that lead to successful
reading, such as knowledge of
letters and understanding of
print, writing, and narrative.
Gains were still evident six
months after the program had
ended.
Contact:
Susan B. Neuman
437 Ritter Hall
Temple University
Philadelphia, PA 19122
(215) 204-4982
sneuman@vm.temple.edu
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The Need for Coordination
An equally challenging obstacle to the
consistent preparation of high-quality early
childhood teachers is the isolation and lack
of coordination in the early care and
education field. Providers range from Head
Start teachers to private nursery schools
teachers to a neighbor caring for a handful of
toddlers. Settings range from family homes and
churches to private centers and public
preschools. Funding ranges from private to
local to state to federal.
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Watching
Kids,
Watching Cars
The median hourly wage for parking
lot attendants ($6.56) remains higher
than the median hourly wage for child
care workers ($6.48).
Source: U.S. Department of Labor,
Bureau of Labor Statistics, 1997
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This fragmented array of early childhood
services has resulted in an inequality of
resources and lack of communication about good
teaching practices, undermining our commitment
to provide high-quality education to all
children. Greater coordination is needed at
the local level to link this mosaic, share
resources, increase access, improve overall
care, and foster children’s language and
literacy development.
It is not unusual for children entering a
single kindergarten class to display a
five-year range of literacy skills. Some
children may have the reading ability of an
8-year-old, while others may have the language
skills of a 3-year-old (Riley, 1996). Although
children will always arrive at school with
different learning needs, better early
education will increase the number of
kindergarteners who are ready to become
successful readers.
Only by rejecting business as usual and
facing up to these many challenges can we take
advantage of the tremendous opportunities to
improve child literacy through early care and
education. Policymakers and early childhood
administrators can work actively to support
child care teachers and to bolster their
contributions to reading success.
Resources for early care and education
providers may be found in Reading
Resources, Appendix I of this book.
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Action
Steps for Policymakers |
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Local, state, and
national policymakers can
improve our systems of early
care and education and promote
literacy. Policymakers can:
&Develop innovative strategies to adequately fund America’s early
care and education system.
Redesign the current financing
system to ensure affordable,
high-quality care for children
and families and competitive
compensation for teachers.
&Broaden expectations for high-quality care to include enhanced early
learning environments that
promote language skills and
literacy.
&Provide high-quality preschool for 3- and 4-year-olds who are at risk
for later school difficulties,
and examine ways to provide
universal preschool.
&Strengthen links between family child care homes, child care centers,
and public schools to share
resources and training.
&Ensure that accreditation and licensing requirements in early care
and education incorporate
research-based practices that
support children’s
cognitive, language, social,
and emotional development, and
that build successful readers.
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&Develop policies and structures, such as Offices for Young Children,
through which state and local
authorities can coordinate
services in early care and
education.
&Create incentives for early childhood programs to use research-based
knowledge in program design.
&Where necessary, modify minimum standards for group sizes and
adult-child ratios to create
better literacy environments
for children.
&Support efforts to build an early childhood career ladder, with
increased responsibilities and
compensation for practitioners
with higher qualifications.
These efforts should attract
and keep the staff who are
best at helping children
learn.
&Support efforts to improve staff training and ongoing professional
development. Coordinate
training efforts across
programs and sponsoring
agencies. Fund scholarships
and create incentives to
encourage pro-viders to pursue
advanced training.
&Use public information campaigns to encourage parents to seek
effective child care that
develops language and other
pre-literacy skills.
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Action
Steps for Practitioners |
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Child care providers,
teachers, directors, and
others can actively prepare
young children for reading
success. Practitioners can:
&Use research-based recommendations and resources to improve literacy
environments for children.
&Converse frequently and informally with babies and children to build
vocabulary, strengthen
concepts, and enhance language
skills. Encourage and respond
to children when they try to
communicate.
&Read to children every day. Encourage children to talk about the
story or characters. Read
one-on-one with a child when
he or she asks.
&Read to infants even before they can speak. Babies love to listen to
voices and will associate
books with pleasant feelings.
&Encourage volunteers to read with children. Find volunteers through
colleges, high schools,
community and seniors
organizations, religious
groups, and businesses.
&Engage children in daily activities to build reading readiness, such
as singing nursery rhymes and
playing sound, word, and
letter games.
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&Use the arts to engage young children in the development of language
and communication skills.
&Set up a reading and writing area for children. Make sure the area is
well lit, with interesting
books and writing tools.
Include books for and about
children with special needs,
and books about the
children’s languages and
cultures.
&Encourage parents to read to and with their children, either in
English or in their home
language. Lend a range of
books overnight.
&Make frequent trips to the library. Contact your librarian to plan a
guided tour. Ask about
bilingual story times or
special story hours.
&Seek out continuing education and training in child development and
in effective teaching
practices. Learn to identify
“red flags” that may
signal barriers to successful
reading..
&Find ways to coordinate training with other early care and education
organizations. Joint training
may be scheduled at a central
site such as a library.
Network to share information
and resources.
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Raising
Readers
Read
to Succeed
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