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Journal ArticleDOI

Child development and emergent literacy

TLDR
It is proposed that emergent literacy consists of at least two distinct domains: inside-out skills and outside-in skills, which appear to be influential at different points in time during reading acquisition.
Abstract
Emergent literacy consists of the skills, knowledge, and attitudes that are developmental precursors to reading and writing. This article offers a preliminary typology of children's emergent literacy skills, a review of the evidence that relates emergent literacy to reading, and a review of the evidence for linkage between children's emergent literacy environments and the development of emergent literacy skills. We propose that emergent literacy consists of at least two distinct domains: inside-out skills (e.g., phonological awareness, letter knowledge) and outside-in skills (e.g., language, conceptual knowledge). These different domains are not the product of the same experiences and appear to be influential at different points in time during reading acquisition. Whereas outside-in skills are associated with those aspects of children's literacy environments typically measured, little is known about the origins of inside-out skills. Evidence from interventions to enhance emergent literacy suggests that relatively intensive and multifaceted interventions are needed to improve reading achievement maximally. A number of successful preschool interventions for outside-in skills exist, and computer-based tasks designed to teach children inside-out skills seem promising. Future research directions include more sophisticated multidimensional examination of emergent literacy skills and environments, better integration with reading research, and longer-term evaluation of preschool interventions. Policy implications for emergent literacy intervention and reading education are discussed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

School Readiness and Later Achievement

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of the results shows that early math skills have the greatest predictive power, followed by reading and then attention skills, while measures of socioemotional behaviors were generally insignificant predictors of later academic performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parental Involvement in the Development of Children’s Reading Skill: A Five-Year Longitudinal Study

TL;DR: The findings of the final phase of a 5-year longitudinal study with 168 middle- and upper middle-class children showed that children's exposure to books was related to the development of vocabulary and listening comprehension skills, and that these language skills were directly related to children's reading in grade 3.
Book

Reading for Understanding: Toward an R&D Program in Reading Comprehension

TL;DR: It is argued that the primary challenge of improving reading performance in the early grades is now to incorporate research based knowledge systematically into teacher preparation and practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oral language and code-related precursors to reading: Evidence from a longitudinal structural model.

TL;DR: This study examined code-related and oral language precursors to reading in a longitudinal study of 626 children from preschool through 4th grade, demonstrating that there is a high degree of continuity over time of both code- related and Oral language abilities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental dyslexia and specific language impairment: same or different?

TL;DR: The authors suggest that 2 dimensions of impairment are needed to conceptualize the relationship between these disorders and to capture phenotypic features that are important for identifying neurobiologically and etiologically coherent subgroups.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

The role of deliberate practice in the acquisition of expert performance.

TL;DR: A theoretical framework is proposed that explains expert performance in terms of acquired characteristics resulting from extended deliberate practice and that limits the role of innate (inherited) characteristics to general levels of activity and emotionality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beginning to read : thinking and learning about print

TL;DR: Marilyn Adams proposes that phonies can work together with the "whole language" approach to teaching reading and provides an integrated treatment of the knowledge and processes involved in skillful reading, the issues surrounding their acquisition, and the implications for reading instruction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Matthew effects in reading: Some consequences of individual differences in the acquisition of literacy.

TL;DR: A framework for conceptualizing the development of individual differences in reading ability is presented in this paper that synthesizes a great deal of the research literature and places special emphasis on reading ability.
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What are models that relates to emergent literacy?

The article proposes a preliminary typology of children's emergent literacy skills, including inside-out skills (e.g., phonological awareness, letter knowledge) and outside-in skills (e.g., language, conceptual knowledge).