Pansies are large and violets are small.
Informational Text and Young Children
So the woman who runs my local children’s book store told me that more
and more parents
of young children are asking for “non-fiction beginning readers”
because “that’s what Common Core wants.” Really? In
kindergarten and first grade?
Aren’t beginning readers supposed to develop their decoding and word
recognition
by reading simple stories (the ones populated by talking pigs).
I’ve seen “easy” nonfiction books that are full of difficult
multisyllable words and proper names.
The publishers have made the books (supposedly) appropriate for
beginning readers
by reducing the number of words in the sentences (until the point they
are almost incomprehensible), putting fewer words on a page and enlarging the
font.
The result is a dumbing-down of the content.
I agree that teachers should be reading more nonfiction to young
children but is the interpretation that Common Core wants young readers to be
reading more nonfiction on their own correct?
The short answer is that Common Core says nothing about kids’ personal
choices
and how they spend their out-of-school time. The standards do set
educational goals—that is,
they establish what it is that schools need to ensure students know and
can do.
These standards require that kids have the skills to read informational
text effectively
(which are somewhat different than the skills needed to read literary
text).
I assume the anecdote reveals a parent who wants to help her child do
well at school.
What a great parent. She might not understand, very clearly, what the
standards require—
the standards also require that students learn how to read literature
effectively, too—
but she recognizes that schools need help and isn’t going to
leave her kid’s success to chance.
Good for her.
I have no doubt that the practice will help. But, let’s remember there
are more reasons for reading than just to do better in school. I’m pleased
about this parent, but I might be even more excited
if she had said, “I want some non-fiction texts for my child because
he’s interested in spiders.”
Your letter expresses concern that Common Core is transforming home
reading practices.
There are other observers who fear that it is imposing reading
experiences
that are not “developmentally appropriate” for young children
(your letter might have been prompted by that, too).
Those claims are Loony-tunes (with apologies to Elmer Fudd and Daffy
Duck).
It's great that the standards are encouraging young readers to take on
informational texts.
Nell Duke reported that first graders had the opportunity to read such
texts at school
only about 3.6 minutes per day (and she even included the bulletin
boards)
—that’s less than 11 hours per year!
This gap is even more important given the large percentage of youngsters
(Correls, 2011),
who are dying to read about snakes, horses, dinosaurs, rocket ships,
skeletons, submarines, pirates, etc. (I get to see that these days with my
grandkids and nephews,
and I used to see it with the first-graders that I taught in my own
classrooms).
What you say about beginning level texts is often true, sad to say.
Too often the content is dumbed down… but that is no less true for
stories.
Let’s be honest, beginning reading texts have rarely merited praise for
their literary quality
(Dr. Seuss being one of the rare exceptions that proves the rule). The
limits on children’s decoding skills definitely limits what can be put into the
texts for young readers, but this is true for all texts,
not just informational
ones. Teachers rarely read non-fiction texts to kids,
and they rarely make such texts available to children to read on their
own.
However, these practices seem to be changing. Even the National
Association of Educators
of Young Children—a group focused heavily on the learning of preschool
children (ages/grades
not covered by CCSS) are encouraging the promotion of informational text
even with younger kids.
http://www.naeyc.org/books/so_much_more_than_the_abcs/excerpt
Kids definitely can learn from talking pigs, but they can learn from pigs (and dinosaurs)
Kids definitely can learn from talking pigs, but they can learn from pigs (and dinosaurs)
that don't talk. In fact, many of them prefer it that way.
Shanahan on Literacy http://www.shanahanonliteracy.com/
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading
YouTube
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo
Charged Reading YouTube
Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?
Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister
blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com gives many ways
for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com which takes
advantage of the experience and expertise of others.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com
just for fun.
To
quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will
know.
The
more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”
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Your opinions, experience and questions are welcome. M'reen