Child
as a Technician Literacy and
Numeracy Birth to Four
Observation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YsvVHfSx4v4
Name: Richard
Age: 4 years
Setting: At home
Adult Participant: Mum
- Richard is reading a book, “I Went Walking”.
- Richard begins with closed book on his lap and tells us he will read “I Went Walking”. He reads the book from left to right, turning the right hand pages to progress through the story.
- When Richard speaks quickly and cannot be understood, Mum immediately interjects and tells him to slow his speech down.
- The book has few words in large font and big colourful pictures of a young child walking along meeting colourful animals. The story depicts two voices, the young child who says “I went walking” and another who asks “What did you see?” The child responds with a rhyming answer such as “I saw a black cat looking at me!”
- The illustration depicts a black cat. The next and following pages ask the same question and we meet a brown horse, red cow, green duck, pink pig and yellow dog. The animals follow him but he doesn’t see them until he turns around and says, “I went walking” “What did you see?” “I saw a lot of animals following me!”
- Richard looks at the pictures and points to the words as he reads. Richard makes a couple of mistakes and Mum corrects him.
- When reading about the red cow, Richard asks his Mum why the cow is red.
Richard holds the book in a fashion considered appropriate for the English culture and turns the pages right to left. He uses expression in his voice and makes the appropriate responses. His eye movements show him scanning the illustrations before looking at the text. (Makin & Whitehead 2004). This suggests to me he has had many books read to him in his life and that he well on his to cracking the code of reading. The dialogue has a flow and it rhymes. Structure and pattern are key components of mathematical thinking and can be experienced and heard every day. (Tucker 2014)He shows interest in the pictures and appears to use them as a prompt for the text. Both Richard and his Mum are active participants in this activity. Richard is engaged and inquisitive. Mum prompts him or corrects him quite quickly when he makes a mistake. I have no doubt Mum has the best of intentions but my concern here would be it may risk inhibiting his progression, rather than enhancing it. It is important for Richard to develop skills in self correction. By asking children to self-monitor they identify what they know and what they need improvement on. (Van de Walle et al 2014)
Plan
Richard has a good
understanding of how books should be read.
I would read more to him. It
seems he enjoys the experience so the more practice he gets the better. Going on a Word Walk might be fun. We could support Richards learning by pointing
out words and letters. Signs are
everywhere so playing games like count
how many R’s for Richard we can see, are beneficial. Teaching him to write his name is a great way
to engage him. Young children have ‘powerful desire to make marks’(Makin
& Whitehead 2004). We could extend this by giving Richard magazines or
catalogues to find and cut out words and letters that make his name. He shows
an interest in the silliness of a red cow.
It might be fun to extend this by making pictures of silly animals and
then naming them. It may be helpful for Richards Mum to not jump in so
quickly. Encouragement as a motivator
tends to work best when it is given as a way for the child to think through the
task for themselves. The process is more
important than the end result. (McNaughton & Williams 2009) If Richard was
given a little time, his ability to self-correct may be improved. Exercises
like making up silly animals and cutting and sticking words together give him
an opportunity to tell his own stories.
It also shows Richard that there can be flexibility in story-telling. If
the experience can be nurturing and safe, Richard will be more likely to want to
read. (Makin & Whitehead 2004). I
link my plan with the Early Years Learning Framework – Outcome 4 Children are confident and involved learners 4.1 Children develop dispositions for
learning such as curiosity, cooperation, confidence, creativity, commitment,
enthusiasm, persistence, imagination and reflexivity and 4.3 Children transfer
and adapt what they have learned from one context to another.References
The Early Years Learning Framework (2009). Belonging, Being & Becoming, Commonwealth of Australia, pp34,36.
Makin, L & Whitehead, M (2004). How to develop Children’s Early Literacy; A guide for Professional Carers & Educators, PCP Publishing Ltd, London, pp52-57.
McNaughton & Williams (2009). Encouraging, Praising and Helping, Techniques for Teaching Young Children, (3rd Ed), Frenchs Forest: Pearson Australia, p70.
Tucker, K (2014). Mathematics though play in the early years, (3rd Ed), Sage Publications, pp60-68.
Van de Walle (2014). Teaching Student-Centred Mathematics; Developmentally Appropriate Instruction for Grades Pre-K-2, Pearson Education Inc, p171.
Williams, S., (1992) I went walking, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.