Playing
with print:
Ways parents can encourage children’s
writing success
Parent Spot
for Parents of Preschool Students
Most parents
understand that reading to young children from a very early age is
one of the best ways to encourage a lifelong love of books, as well
as teach them about the sounds, rhythms and structure of our spoken
language. However, an equally important, yet often overlooked way of
learning about language comes from the writing that we do with our
young children.
"Write with
my toddler?" you might ask. "He doesn’t even have the
words to ask for a glass of juice. How on earth can I expect him to
put his thoughts down with pen to paper?" According to Linda
Carr, Early Literacy Coordinator for the Capital Region Board of
Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES), writing with your young
child is easier and a lot more fun than you might think.
"Helping
your child become a writer can be as simple as providing them with a
piece of paper and a chunky crayon to scribble with," says
Carr. "The key is for parents to understand that their
child’s early scribbles, pictures and strings of letters have
meaning to the child and carry a message, albeit a temporary
one."
When it comes to
early writing experiences, Carr recommends that parents temper their
desire to correct their children’s work. Certainly a parent should
model the "right" direction a letter should face or the
correct spelling of a word, just as a parent models the correct
pronunciation of a word when a child is learning to talk. However,
parents should be careful not to overwhelm their child and make
writing a tedious task.
"For young
children, simply being allowed to experiment with writing, their own
writing, can be a wonderful way to learn about the relationship
between letters and sounds, as well as be a way to express
themselves creatively," says Carr. "If they learn that
what they try their hand at early on is praised and valued just for
what it is, then they will be more likely to take risks when it
comes to expressing themselves with writing later on."
Writing
for the joy of it
Carr says that
just as with reading, young children develop their ideas about the
importance of writing from what they are exposed to at home. For
this reason, she suggests using everyday activities such as the
following to help encourage your children’s understanding of the
value of printed words and to give them practice with writing:
- Talk with your children
about what you are doing as you write out a phone message or
make note of an important family event on the calendar.
- Enlist your children’s
help in making a grocery list. Talk with them about a few of the
items that you want to buy and have them use their own writing
(with young children this may be squiggles, swirls, symbols or
pictures) to make their own list of the items they will be
responsible for remembering during your outing. Take the time to
discuss what they have written and make a point of referring to
the list throughout the shopping trip.
- Make a game out of finding
the letters of your child’s name on signs, books, magazines,
labeled food containers, etc.
- Provide your child with a
set of alphabet tiles or magnetic letters. Very young children
will enjoy sorting them by color and exploring the different
curves and lines of their shapes. With older children these can
be used to make more formal words and sentences.
Giving your
child the tools of writing
Some children like having a
formal writing space where they can write; others prefer to write
when the spirit moves them. The following are some readily
available, inexpensive and portable items to have on hand for
writing exploration, regardless of where your child finds her/his
muse:
- Newsprint, scrap paper,
used greeting cards, mail-order forms, envelopes, small
notebooks
- A variety of washable
markers, crayons, pencils and other writing tools (use your
child’s age and ability level to determine the variety and
relative safety of the types of materials they have access to).
For permission to reprint this
article, please contact the Capital Region BOCES Communications
Service by e-mailing us at dbushsuf@gw.neric.org.
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