A Playful Approach to Learning for Ages 3 – 6
Helping Your Child to Enjoy Books
by Dr. Dorothy G. Singer
A parent is the first role model who conveys to a child that reading is a joyful, enriching experience. When a child sees a parent reading, and if there are books around the house, and visits to the local library, a child learns that books are a special part of the environment, and contain the material that nurtures a child’s imagination. More than that, a child will learn that the mysterious squiggles a child sees on the pages in a book, in a newspaper, or in a magazine are actually discrete letters that form into words that communicate meanings.
What are some simple things a parent can do to promote an interest in books? First and foremost, be sure to talk to your child often. Your child then learns that language is a tool to transmit ideas, to share information about the world, and to help a child to express her concerns, and emotions. Your child will also learn that these thoughts can be written down on paper. And we can read them. We are not advocating teaching reading to preschoolers, but we do think preschoolers can be exposed to emergent literacy by
1. giving them familiarity with books;
2. learning that we read from left to right in English;
3. continuing down to the next line when we finish with one;
4. learning that a book has a front and back cover;
5. that letters have particular sounds;
6. that an author writes a book and;
7. that a story or book has a title.
Research studies in our lab at Yale University with preschool children in daycare centers, home care settings, and in children’s own homes in five states used guided pretend play approaches involving five imaginative games, such as playing store, searching for a lost puppy, a visit by a Martian, a hunt for underwater treasure, and a birthday party. These games were presented to the children through videos of children and adults engaged in these pretend games, and then the children were given the opportunity to play the games themselves with the guidance of the teacher or parent.
After just two weeks of such play, there were significant gains made by the children in an understanding of new vocabulary, increases in rhyming, use of compound words, and in concentration and cooperative play. Many children did pretend reading and joined the local libraries, The results also indicated that the children played more of their own games after the study was completed, and that the teachers and parents stated that they now had more ideas for how to approach beginning reading.
Specifically, here are five games a parent and child can play together to promote emergent literacy through play:
1. Puppet Play – Use puppets and have your child act out a simple poem that you read to her. It can be a favorite nursery rhyme such as Jack and Jill.
2. Story Time – Tell your child a story about your own childhood. Ask your child to tell you a story about a trip you took together. You can write down the words, and even draw one thing on the trip he especially liked.
3. A Journey – Take a trip around the house, and pretend you make up names that rhyme with the objects you see. Chair can be stair, bed can be red, toaster can be a roaster, spoon a can be moon. Write these rhymes down and read them together. You read the word first and have your child repeat it.
4. The Merry Monster Book - Each day you play this game, the Merry Monster does something silly. Have your child make up a silly stunt such as putting a pot on his head for a hat, putting his shirt on backwards, wearing his sock on his hand . Write down the pranks in a Merry Monster book that you and your child make with plain paper and staples. You can begin to read this together as you point to the words.
5. Computer Time – Let the child write a funny story to grandparents using e-mail. Help with the words and then send it off. This give a child practice finding alphabet letters and gives a child a sense of empowerment.
Author Bio:
Dorothy G. Singer is Senior Research Scientist, Department of Psychology, Yale University and Co-Director, with Jerome L. Singer, of the Yale University Family Television Research and Consultation Center. She has focused on early childhood development, television effects on youth, and parent training in imaginative play. Recent books include Handbook of Children and the Media; Make-Believe: Games and Activities for Imaginative Play; Imagination and Play in the Electronic Age, and A Mandate for Playful Learning in Preschool. She co- edited Play =Learning, and Children’s Play: Roots of Reading, which was selected for CHOICE’s Outstanding Academic Title list. Singer received the award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to the Media by Division 46 of the American Psychological Association in 2004 and the Distinguished Alumni Award from Teachers College, Columbia University in 2006.
Name: Dorothy G. Singer, Ed.D.
Title: Co-Director, Yale University Family Television Research and Consultation Center, Senior Research Scientist, Department of Psychology, Yale University
Physical Address: Department of Psychology, P.O. Box 208205, New Haven, CT 06520-8205
Phone: 203-432-4565 and 203-393-3933
E-mail: dorothy.singer@yale.edu
(Permission granted for Rebecca Wolf to post this article on www.SibleyCenter.com given on January 11, 2009.
Thank you for sharing your article with us, Dr. Singer!)