Preparing for Success : Meeting the Language and Learning Needs of Young Children from Poverty Homes - Softcover

 
9780970607409: Preparing for Success : Meeting the Language and Learning Needs of Young Children from Poverty Homes

Inhaltsangabe

Language skills, which are essential to school success, are the distinguishing characteristic between children from low socio-economic status (LSES) homes and those from middle socio-economic status (MSES) settings. This practical and information-packed book addresses the gap between language needs of students and language requirements of the classroom. Research spanning thirty years is pulled together to make a coherent, readable case for teaching language through classroom content presentation and to provide a clear path for doing so. As an incentive, indicators of what can happen when language is acknowledged are bolstered by predictions of what can happen when language needs are ignored.

Chapter One--"What Is Going On?"--is a quick overview. "To meet many [kindergarten] objectives, children need to be able to use language to talk about topics introduced in the classroom. These topics frequently are events that children may not have directly experienced. Verbs like "discuss," "describe," "tell" and "answer" signal [these] requirements.

Chapter Two--"If It's So Important, Why Didn't I Know About It Before This?"--traces the route by which language was invited out of the classroom at the same time that increasing numbers of researchers were identifying its importance to classroom learning. "The people who may know the least about the learning needs of young children from poverty homes may be the people making the most decisions about how to teach them. The people responsible for writing commercial curriculum materials, writing state standards for content areas, and developing educational assessments have a powerful impact on what goes on in the classroom. They are primarily skilled and qualified in areas outside of teaching young [LSES] children."

Chapter Three--"What Can I Do About This?"--offers a range of practical ideas for teaching language while presenting content. "The question of how to meet the language and learning needs of young children from poverty homes has a simple answer: Have more language-building experiences in the classroom!"

Chapter Four--"What Is CurricuLanguage?"--invites educators to embed sequenced levels of language acquisition opportunities across curricular activities. "Due to the nature of language learning, student language development does not require a separate 'language development' block of scheduled time. Instead, necessary skills can be taught as an outcome of careful selection of content teaching methods and activities."

Chapter Five--"Why Talk About This Now?"--is a visit from the ghost of education future. With current bureaucratic policies pushing education reform, the prediction is that language will be increasingly ignored. "The greatest risk … is that [accountability procedures] will actually increase the divide between rich kids and poor kids. While MSES schools will be freed, by higher standardized scores, to experiment with newer 21st century approaches and interactions, the LSES schools will not have this same teaching freedom." The concern is raised that, without attention to language-learning needs, classes for young children from poverty homes will become "conceptual ghettos where children, walled off from newer teaching strategies, are relentlessly confronted with what they don't know, can't do, and don't care about."

The book ends with a reminder that turning classes into language-rich environments can begin with some very small steps that are presented.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Dr. Carolyn Weiner earned an MA in speech pathology from the University of Iowa in 1970, the national speech pathology certification in 1971, and an Ed.D. degree from Arizona State University in 1994. Starting as a public school speech pathologist, she became supervisor, then director of the Arizona State University Speech and Hearing Clinic, where she taught classes in language development and language skills in the classroom.

She has written more than 25 books and materials for use in educational settings, four of which have been Main Selections for the Library of Speech-Language Pathology. In 1984, her book, “How to Use Reproducible Illustrations in Language Remediation,” was named as one of the top ten books on child language. From 1984 to 1991 she published the Syndactics Bulletin, a monthly newsletter on child language and educational success, co-wrote an innovative literacy kindergarten curriculum (K-TALK & K-READ), and (with Dysart Migrant Preschool Director Betty Churchill and Dr. Judy Creighton) designed and implemented the award-winning Dysart preschool program.

Currently, Dr. Weiner combines skills and interests in the related areas of curriculum, computer-assisted data analysis, and educationally-based language requirements in order to head and evaluate projects designed to enhance educational growth and opportunities for young children at risk of educational failure. The recently-published preschool assessment Pre-K Success exemplifies her concern for provision of quality child information and her regard for young children as unique learners with exciting potential for success.

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