We all know how important it
is to read orally to young children. When we share books, in any language, we
are modeling fluent reading, including expressive ‘voices,’ proper phrasing,
and an appropriate pace. Oral reading supports vocabulary development as
children begin to understand that clues to understanding new words can be found
in the context of a paragraph and in text features, such as pictures. All of
these are necessary components of a child’s future reading success.
But beyond that, we can use
the pictures to help give children the idea that we need to use a book (text)
to answer questions. This helps children understand the importance of using
facts to support our answers. In school, children will be required to answer
text-dependent questions. We can help develop this school-ready skill, not to
mention that using facts as the basis for responding to questions and forming
opinions, helps develop an educated society.
Here is an example of how you
can do this for preschoolers.
You can easily use the
pictures in age-appropriate books to help children respond to questions. In the
example picture above, you can ask literal questions like, “What colors are in Llama’s
shirt?” After a child answers, you should ask the child to point to the part of
the picture that shows the answer is correct. Of course, the child should point
to Llama’s shirt. Literal questions and
answers like this are easy to turn into text dependent questions. But, we can
and should go beyond the literal level of comprehension.
Ask deeper questions about
characters, which are still part of preschoolers' abilities. For example, you
might ask, “How is Llama feeling?” This is not a literal question, but it is still possible to use facts from the picture to support a child’s claim. Most children would
respond that Llama feels mad. Then ask, “What makes you think that?” Children
need to use details from the picture like the look in Llama’s eyes, the shape
of Llama’s mouth, or his tongue being out as facts that resulted in them say, “mad.”
Asking all children to support
their responses with details from a text is important as it helps everyone
develop a sense that facts matter!
Standards Alignment:
NAEYC - 2.E.
Head Start - VII.A.
Head Start - VII.A.