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Early Literacy: Early Literacy: Perkins Panda Perkins Panda Tom Miller Tom Miller Educational Partnerships Program Educational Partnerships Program Perkins School for the Blind Perkins School for the Blind

Early Literacy: Perkins Panda

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Early Literacy: Perkins Panda . Tom Miller Educational Partnerships Program Perkins School for the Blind. Early Literacy. What is Literacy????. Early Literacy. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Early Literacy: Perkins Panda

Early Literacy:Early Literacy:Perkins Panda Perkins Panda

Tom MillerTom MillerEducational Partnerships ProgramEducational Partnerships Program

Perkins School for the BlindPerkins School for the Blind

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Early Literacy

•What is Literacy????

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Early Literacy

• “Literacy in its most basic form is the ability both to understand and to express one’s feelings, desires and experiences to others.”

Perkins Panda Resource Guide, p. 7, 2002

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Early Literacy

• How does literacy develop?

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Early Literacy

• “Experiences are at the heart of literacy development.”

• Perkins Panda Resource Guide, p 6, 2002

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Early Literacy Language development Hierarchy

Verbal Symbolic BehaviorVisual Expressive language: WritingVisual Receptive Language: ReadingAuditory Expressive Language: SpeechAuditory Receptive Language:Comprehending the Spoken Word

Inner LanguageVisual/Auditory Symbol and experience

EXPERIENCEMyklebust, Psychology of Deafness, 1969

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Early Literacy

• How might visual impairment and/or additional disabilities affect literacy development?

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Early Literacy

• Primary issue is the loss of incidental learning– ACCESS to the full sensory experiences of life which enable us to build an understanding of the world.

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Early Literacy

• What is our role as parents, caregivers and professionals in literacy development?

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Early Literacy

• As families, caregivers and professionals our primary role is enabling the child to “read the world.”

• Rosenketter, Learning to Read the World, p. 4, 2004

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Early LiteracyThe Perkins Panda Early Literacy

Program is designed to encourage:

• Connections between caregiver and child

• Literacy opportunities which focus on play and social interaction

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Early Literacy• To enable the child to read the

world you need:• PRESENCE– being there when child

reaches for a toy, smiles, and responding with acknowledgement, pleasure, and verbal labels.

• Rosenketter, Learning to Read the World, p. 6, 2004

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Early Literacy• Music and songs create a fun

opportunity for being “present” with your child.

• An opportunity for movement, concept development and social interaction.

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Early Literacy

• TIME– to notice and expand on the child’s efforts, to explain actions and words, and to share, label and jointly experience everyday activities.

• Rosenketter, Learning to Read the World, p. 6, 2004

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Early Literacy

• Opportunities for literacy learning exist within all our day to day experiences with our child.

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Early Literacy• WORDS– well chosen to encourage

child’s efforts, words combined with waiting for the child’s first communication attempts via whole body movements, gesturing, vocalizations or pseudo-words.

• Rosenketter, Learning to Read the World, p. 6, 2004

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Early Literacy• Literacy is more than words.

• Literacy involves the ability to “read” and communicate one’s needs and desires through objects, symbols, pictures, sign, gestures, or print.

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Early Literacy

• PRINT– acknowledge and expose the child to the many forms of print (symbols, pictures, Braille) in their day to day life.

• Rosenketter, Learning to Read the World, p. 6, 2004

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Early Literacy• Successful literacy development

connects objects, words, symbols, or pictures to the child’s experiences.

• Literacy gives meaning to your child’s world and connects them to others.

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Early LiteracyINTENTION– repeatedly and emphatically emphasize the lifelong importance of (for both adult and child) of words and print.

• (tangible symbols; objects; pictures, Braille)

• Rosenketter, Learning to Read the World, p. 6, 2004

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Early Literacy

• Key message is:• “ Language works. Print,

objects, symbols, braille are fun. They make my life better.”

• Rosenketter, Learning to Read the World, p. 6, 2004

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Early Literacy• Literacy development is grounded

in our interactions with the child with visual impairments

andIn how we make everyday experiences and concepts accessible.