Vocabulary
• Talk with your baby or toddler about what is
going on around you.
• When your baby babbles or your child talks,
listen carefully and answer.
• Ask your baby or toddler lots of questions.
Even if she does not have the words to answer, she learns
that questions are invitations for her to respond.
• Speak clearly. Use short sentences. Repeat yourself
when your child shows interest.
• Speak in the language that is most comfortable
for you.
• Read together every day. Books have pictures
of things you may not see often. Name the pictures as
you point to them — this helps children learn
new words.
• Research shows that children who have larger
vocabularies are better readers. Knowing many words
helps children recognize written words and understand
what they read.
Print Motivation
• Begin reading books early — even when
your child is a newborn.
• Make book-sharing time special time —
just you and your baby or toddler.
• Let your baby or toddler see you reading.
• Visit your public library often.
• Children who enjoy being read to will want to learn how to read.
Print Awareness
• Use board books or cloth books and have your
child hold the book.
• If there are only a few words on the page, point
to each word as you say it.
• Read aloud every day — print labels, signs,
menus. Print is everywhere!
• Being familiar with printed language helps children feel comfortable with books and understand that print is useful.
Narrative Skills
• Talk to your child about what you are doing.
• Tell your child stories.
• Encourage your toddler to tell you about things.
Listen patiently and ask questions.
• Read favorite books again and again.
• Talking with children develops comprehension skills that will help them understand what they read.
Phonological Awareness
• Say nursery rhymes so that your child hears
words that rhyme. Emphasize the rhyming words.
• Add actions as you sing a song or recite a poem.
This helps your child break down language into separate
words.
• Singing songs is a good way to help your child
hear syllables in words. In most songs, each syllable
in a word gets a different note.
• Make up your own silly, nonsense rhymes.
• Say rhymes and sing songs in the language that
is most comfortable for you.
• Being able to hear the sounds that make up words helps children sound out written words as they begin to read.
Letter Knowledge
• Help your baby and toddler see and feel different
shapes as you play. (Say, “The ball is round.”)
• Read alphabet books.
• Point out letters on toys, food boxes and other
objects around the house.
• Talk with your toddler about what is the same
and what is different between two things.
Children learn best when they enjoy what they are
doing.
• Look for books with clear and simple pictures.
• Choose a good time to read, when you and your
child are relaxed and happy.
• Point to pictures. Talk about them in an excited
voice.
• Notice what your baby looks at, and then talk
about it.
• It is natural for babies to play with books,
even to chew or tear them.
• Stop for a while if your baby loses interest
or gets upset. A few enjoyable minutes at a time is
better than a longer unhappy time together.
• While you read, make your child feel loved and
special.
• Share books with your baby every day. Even a few minutes are important. "By the time children are two years old, they
understand 300 to 500 words. You help your child
learn new words by talking and reading together."
Talk and have fun!
The Early Literacy
Initiative
A partnership among the Public Library Association,
the Association for Library Service to Children
and the National Institute of Child Health &
Human Development
This information created by Dr. Grover (Russ)
Whitehurst, Leading Professor of Psychology, State
University of New York and Dr. Christopher Lonigan,
Associate Professor of Psychology, Florida State
University.
Funding provided by
the Public Library Association (PLA) and the Association
for Library Service to Children (ALSC), divisions
of the American Library Association. Spring 2001
© copyright 2004 -- PLA/ALSC, divisions of
the American Library Association
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