Why?
For my
second post within the technician module, I have decided to explore children’s
literacy and numeracy development in terms of the different stages and the
order these occur in. From readings and
class discussions I am hoping to post a learning continuum for my outcome, one that
I can continue to work on, and change.
What?
LITERACY
Levine
& Munsch (2010) outlines stages of young children’s language development,
although emphasis is not put on the ages, as children develop language at different
rates. The first development stage is “Infants’ Preverbal Communication”, the
early stages of this includes crying, cooing and babbling (Levine & Munsch,
2010). Babies’ crying is first only a reflexive behaviour, but it comes
communicative when babies learn it is a signal and it can provide relief from
hunger, discomfort and loneliness. Around the ages of two to four, they join
the conversation, as they coo, parent respond and talk back (Levine &
Munsch, 2010). It is at 4 – 6 months that babies begin to make one sound
syllables, and at 6 – 8 months they the join different sounds together; the
most common sounds are /b/, /d/ and /m/ (Levine & Munsch, 2010). Within the
preverbal communication stage infants also engage in joint attention and use
gestures and sign language. Pointing is
a common gesture used by infants, and is continued to be used throughout their
language development. Infant’s gestures, and parents response to them is an
important interaction that enhances language development, particularly
contributing to their vocabulary and comprehension (Levine & Munsch, 2010).
The second
stage described is “Toddlers’ Development of words and sentences”, this stage
starts by babies learning their first words, which may come from the babbling
sounds they play with (Levine & Munsch, 2010). First words, are often made
up, as language comprehension comes before language production, infants begin
to understand words around 9 months, while their development of words occurs
around 13 months (Levine & Munsch, 2010). In this stage infants begin to
develop their vocabulary and around the age of two they have around 200 – 500
words. During this second year, toddlers begin to understand that words are symbols,
which stand for objects and they begin to from two and three word utterances
(Levine & Munsch, 2010). The third stage is called “Language Development of
Pre-schoolers”, this is when three year olds begin to use multiword sentences
with morphemes, creating more sophisticated sentence structures. This is the
stage when children begin to develop written language and phonological
awareness (Levine & Munsch, 2010).
NUMERACY
Young children have a desire to make sense of the world around them, they are “Active, resourceful individuals who can construct, modify and integrate ideas by interacting with the physical world and with peers and adults” (Foundations for Numeracy: An Evidence-based Toolkit for Early Learning Practitioners, 2010, p.12). One way children make sense of the world around them is through numeracy. Some of the key concepts of mathematical understanding include, numbers, geometry, measurement, patterns, reasoning and probability. In the article there was these resource sheets, which I thought could be useful when developing my numeracy continuum.
Young children have a desire to make sense of the world around them, they are “Active, resourceful individuals who can construct, modify and integrate ideas by interacting with the physical world and with peers and adults” (Foundations for Numeracy: An Evidence-based Toolkit for Early Learning Practitioners, 2010, p.12). One way children make sense of the world around them is through numeracy. Some of the key concepts of mathematical understanding include, numbers, geometry, measurement, patterns, reasoning and probability. In the article there was these resource sheets, which I thought could be useful when developing my numeracy continuum.
Now What?
From my readings I have gained a
better understanding on some of the developmental stages and
milestones of young children's literacy and numeracy, which I hope to use when
developing my own continuum. In my continuum I will not use specific ages as
children's development happens at all different rates.
References
Foundations
for Numeracy: An Evidence-based Toolkit for Early Learning Practitioners.
(2010). Canadian Child Care Federation and Canadian Language and Literacy
Research Network.
Levine, L,
E., & Munsch, J. (2010) Child Development: An Active Learning Approach, p.
299 – 337. Sage Publications.



