Students need to be able to use language appropriately for a broad range of
functions and perceive the functions for which others use language.
Oral language is the foundation skill that students bring to school. Although
students come to school with different levels of competence in their speaking
and listening abilities, they bring their oral language and experiences as strengths
to literacy learning. Oral language is the foundation on which reading is built.
Students' oral language abilities are interwoven with learning to read and write.
The oral language students acquire as preschoolers helps them connect words
and sounds with print. Throughout the school years, oral language is both a
means whereby students learn about reading and is a goal of literacy instruction.
Any competence that students develop in oral language pays dividends in their
reading and writing development. Encouraging oral language in the classroom
and at home is a continuing process. It is not something that can be accomplished
in a month or even a year; it requires time and patience to reap the harvest.
Parents, teachers, and the entire school community must work together to support
students in the process.
The purpose of the Oral Language Development Continuum for Preschool &endash;
Grade 1 is to provide information for parents, teachers, and other significant
adults as they work with young students. It is a useful tool for assessing students'
development along a continuum of oral language growth as well as providing information
about the competencies that students are expected to learn in preschool and
first grade. On the continuum, descriptors list specific behaviors that detail
students' development at particular ages or grades. The competencies list specific
behaviors that students are expected to learn in kindergarten and first grade
according to the 1999 North Carolina Standard Course of Study for English Language
Arts.
Descriptors
- Listen attentively for short time periods (e.g., stories, poems, music,
rhymes, etc.).
- Follow directions during daily/classroom routines.
- Focus
on own needs when listening.
- Talk about daily experiences.
- May/May
not use complete sentences.
- Communicate nonverbally.
- Ask what
unfamiliar words mean.
Descriptors
- Respond to stories, poems, rhymes, music, action songs.
- Follow
2-3 step directions.
- Respond to questions.
- Listen attentively
for increasing periods.
- Connect information and events to life experiences.
- Know
that print is read in stories.
- Retell stories or events in chronological
order.
- Pay attention to repetitive sounds/patterns.
- Use new vocabulary
and grammatical constructions in own speech.
- Demonstrate literal comprehension
of stories by asking questions and making comments.
- Use more complex sentences.
- Seek/Share
information and appreciation during social interactions.
Competencies
- Demonstrate understanding that spoken language is a sequence of identifiable
speech sounds.
- Demonstrate sense of story (beginning, middle, end, characters).
- Connect
information and events in text to experience.
- Understand and follow oral-graphic
directions.
- Demonstrate understanding of literary language: (e.g., "once
upon a time" and other vocabulary specific to a genre).
- Use words
that describe color, size, and location in a variety of texts (e.g., oral retelling).
- Use
new vocabulary in own speech and writing.
- Maintain conversation and discussions:
- attending
to oral presentations.
- taking turns expressing ideas and asking questions.
Descriptors
- Follow directions that have a series of steps.
- Express the main
point of a conversation.
- Adjust language and syntax to different situations.
- Adjust
rate and volume to situation.
- Use talk to clarify ideas or experiences.
- Track
print when listening to a familiar text being read or when rereading own writing.
Competencies
- Use specific words that name and tell action in oral and written language.
- Extend
skills using oral and written language:
- clarifying purposes for engaging
in communication.
- using clear and precise language to paraphrase messages.
-
engaging in more extended oral discussions.
- Compose a variety
of products: (e.g. oral retellings).
- Elaborate on how information and
events connect to life experiences.
- Discuss unfamiliar oral vocabulary
after listening to text.
- Develop phonemic awareness:
- count number
of syllables in a word.
- blend the phonemes of one syllable word.
-
segment the phonemes of one syllable words.
- change the beginning, middle,
and ending sounds to produce new words.
Descriptors
- Express personal ideas, feelings, information, and experiences.
- Summarize
what has been said.
- Make predictions.
- Ask speaker to repeat what
has been said for understanding and clarity.
- Communicate effectively for
variety of purposes and audiences.
- Use words to convey meaning, entertain,
or share information.
- Evidence expanding language repertoire (e.g., standard
language usage, informal conversation, dialogue, etc.).
People use written language for different purposes. Parents and teachers can
use this chart to encourage students in their written language development.
| |
Insturmental | Informative |
Personal |
| Functions |
- Language to get what we want
- Asserting
personal rights/needs
- Asserting positive/negative expressions
- Requesting
an opinion
- Incidental expressions
|
- Language to represent the world to others
- Language
to impart what one knows
- Labeling, noting details
- Noting
incidents, sequences
- Making generalizations
- Comparing
|
- Language to develop and maintain one's own unique
identity
|
| Examples |
- I want some milk.
- I'm first because I'm
the oldest.
- I need a pencil.
- It tastes good to me.
- Do
you like my new shirt?
- My goodness!
- You're too loud.
|
- That's a Lexus.
- It's green and blue.
- My
cookie is bigger than yours.
- My sister is in the hospital.
- I
have twenty dollars.
- I'm taller than anyone else my age.
|
- My name is Anne Catherine.
- I'm good at
music.
- I like Siamese cats.
- I'm the only child in my family.
- I
want to be a teacher when I grow up.
- I'm smart at language.
|
| Ways to Promote Oral Language |
- Encourage children to state their requests clearly.
- Help
children become aware of how people use language to get what they want.
- Encourage
children to provide assistance to and seek assistance from peers.
|
- Engage children in experiences which require them
to observe, record, summarize, and draw conclusions.
- Use open-ended
questions.
- Collect data over time. Interpret and draw conclusions
from records.
- Have children revise reports and presentations (their
own and others').
- Encourage children to share what they know in
a variety of formats and settings.
|
- Provide opportunities for children to share personal
opinions, interpretations, and experiences.
- Listen to and talk with
the students personally.
- Create opportunities for students to listen
to and talk with others.
|
| |
Heuristic | Regulatory |
Interactional | Aesthetic |
| Functions |
- Language to speculate and predict what will happen
- Noting
cause/effect relationships
- Noting an event
- Drawing conclusions
- Requesting
a reason
- Problem solving
|
- Language to control others and the world around
us
- Requesting directions
- Requesting others' attention
- Controlling
self
|
- Language to establish and maintain relationships
with others.
|
- Language for its own sake, to express imagination,
to entertain
|
| Examples |
- The airplane crashed because the landing gear didn't
work.
- The rock is too heavy to float.
- It might rain tomorrow.
- We
better not run away from home.
- Why can't I go?
- Why does
this happen?
|
- Do it this way (to self).
- Give me the biggest
one.
- Give me your paper and I'll give it to the teacher.
- Give
me a blue crayon.
- Show me how to do it.
- Where shall I put
it?
- Watch this.
- Look at me.
|
- Let's be friends.
- Tell me about...
- I
like you because...
- Will you play with me?
- Would you like
for me to help you?
|
- Let me tell you a story.
- Let's pretend.
- Let's
sing a song.
- Let's play house.
- Once upon a time...
- Peter
Piper picked...
|
| Ways to Promote Oral Language |
- Engage children in problem solving.
- Create
an environment that encourages inquiry, promotes investigations, and generates
new questions.
- Invite predictions when reading fiction or non-fiction
and in content area studies.
|
- Talk about why, where, and when people use regulatory
language.
- Let children give directions and explain class rules.
- Encourage
children to use more appropriate regulatory language as teachers use less.
- Let
children be in charge of large and small groups.
|
- Schedule opportunities for students to share their
strengths with others.
- Provide opportunities for students to work
in collaborative groups. Provide opportunities for
- students to read
and write together.
|
- Provide opportunities for students to use their
imaginations through drama, poetry, role playing, puppetry, music, dance,
mime, and discussion.
- Schedule storytelling, read alouds, and performances
- Schedule
reading and writing workshops as a part of the instructional routine.
|
Allen, Leanne. West Australia Department of Education. (1994). First Steps:
Oral Language Resource Book: Melbourne, Australia: Addison Wesley Longman Australia
Pty Limited.
Children's Choices. (October, yearly). Primary Level Books. The Reading Teacher.
Newark, Delaware: International Reading Association.
Gambrell, Linda B. and Almasi, Janice F. (Eds.). (1996). Lively Discussions!
Fostering Engaged Reading. Newark, Delaware: International Reading Association.
Heibert, E.H., Pearson, P.D., Taylor, B.M., Richardson, V., and Paris, S.G.
(1998). Every Child a Reader: Center for the Improvement of Early Reading Instruction.
North Carolina English Language Arts Standard Course of Study. (December, 1999).
Raleigh: North Carolina Department of Public Instruction.
Snow, C.E., Burns, M.S., and Griffin, P. (Eds.). (1998). Preventing Reading
Difficulties in Young Children. Washington, D.C.: National Academic Press.
Staab, Claire. (1992). Oral Language for Today's Classroom. Pippin Publishing
Limited.
Teachers' Choices. (November, yearly). Primary Level Books. The Reading Teacher.
International Reading Association.
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