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Emergent Literacy: For Pre-Readers
Age 4-5 years old
To develop Print Motivation
- Make book-sharing time a special time for closeness between you and your child.
- Let your child see you reading.
- Visit your public library often.
Vocabulary
- Talk with you child about what is going on around you. Talk about how things work, feelings, and ideas.
- When your child talks with you, add more detail to what she says.
- Speak in the language that is most comfortable for you.
- Read together every day. When you talk about the story and pictures, your child hears and learns more words.
- Learn together by reading some true books on subjects that your child likes.
Print Awareness
- Read everyday print out loud—labels, signs, lists, menus. Print is everywhere.
- As you share books, point to some of the words as you say them, especially words that are repeated.
- Let your child turn the pages.
- Let your child hold the book and read or tell the story.
- Hold the book upside down. See if your child turns the book right side up.
Narrative Skills
- Listen to your child carefully when he talks.
- Ask a child to tell you about something that happened during the day. Let him tell you about a picture he drew.
- Share books together. Stories help children understand that things happen in order—first, next, last.
- Read a book together that your child already knows. Switch what you do. You be the listener and let your child tell you the story.
- Ask “what” questions. Point to a picture and say, “What is that?” or “What is happening here?”
- Add to what your child says. If your child says, “big truck” then you say, “Yes, a big red fire truck.”
- Ask open-ended questions like, “What do you think is happening in this picture?”
- Help your child relate what is happening in the story to her own experience. For example, “What happened when we went on a picnic?”
Letter Knowledge
- Write your child’s name.
- Make letters from clay together or play with magnetic letters together.
- Point out and name letters when reading alphabet books, signs or labels.
- Show your child that the same letter can look different.
- Write words that interest your child (like “dinosaur” or “truck”) using crayons, magnetic letters, or pencil and paper.
Phonological Awareness
- Ask whether two words rhyme: “Do ‘cat’ and ‘dog’ rhyme? Do ‘cat’ and ‘hat’ rhyme?”
- Say words with chunks left out: “What word would we have if you took the ‘hot’ away from ‘hotdog’?”
- Put two word chunks together to make a word: “What word would we have if we put ‘cow’ and ‘boy’ together?”
- Say words with sounds left out: “What word would we have if we took the ‘buh’ sound away from ‘bat’?”
- Say rhymes and make up your own silly nonsense rhymes together.
- Sing songs. Songs have a different note for each syllable in a word, so children can hear that different sounds put together make up words.
- Read poetry together. Make up short poems together. Say the words that rhyme.
- Say rhymes and sing songs in the language most comfortable for you.
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