Ohio State nav bar

Skip to main content

The Ohio State University

  • Help
  • BuckeyeLink
  • Map
  • Find People
  • Webmail
  • Search Ohio State
  • Home
  • Food
  • Family and Relationships
  • Money
  • Mind and Body
  • Webinars
  • Authors

Family and Consumer Sciences

Live Smart Ohio

Ohio State University Extension

Topics:

The Ohio State University
You are here: Home / Family and Relationships / Proven Practices in Helping Young Children Learn to Read and Write

May 30, 2014

Proven Practices in Helping Young Children Learn to Read and Write

8271634110_4db5bf0b9f_zWhen I was a student at Purdue University I worked for two professors who were studying early literacy (reading and writing) in Head Start classrooms (children 3-5 years-old). For two years, literacy was a big part of my life and I learned much about the ins and outs of how adults (parents and teachers) can help children learn letters and numbers and how to engage children in book reading. Young children enjoy exploring, creating, and learning. Through reading and writing children can explore, create, and learn. There has been so much attention to early literacy over the past decade because it has such a lasting impact on children’s future educational and financial success. Let me share a few of the proven practices parents can do to help their young children learn to read and write.

Reading
One common reading technique that helps children engage with the words in a book is called “dialogic reading.” There are six recommendations:

  1. Ask open-ended questions (limit yes/no questions)
  2. Follow child’s answers with questions
  3. Repeat and expand what the child says
  4. Give praise, encouragement, and feedback
  5. Follow the child’s lead and interests
  6. Have fun

Here’s a real life example of dialogic reading on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXmwfyxS1f8

Writing
How many times has your toddler gotten hold of a marker or crayon and drawn all over the walls? Young children use these tools to create scribbles. Eventually, these scribbles will become pictures and written words. Parents can help foster writing skills by doing the following:

  • Build writing into your daily schedule (create opportunities for child to write   during activities and routines)
  • Accept all forms of writing (even scribbles, letter-like shapes)
  • Scaffold children’s writing (verbal reminders, modeling and demonstrations, explain how writing can be used in their dramatic play, tracing)
  • Encourage children to read what they write (this helps children connect what they wrote to the reading process)
  • Encourage invented spelling (where child writes first letter of word, learning that letter represents sounds)
  • Make writing opportunities meaningful (their name, things they like)
  • Have writing materials available around the home and yard (crayons, pencils, washable markers, sidewalk chalk, paints; ream of paper is very inexpensive)
  • Display words around home and take note of words in the neighborhood and community (point out words in pictures, calendars; environmental text, street signs, etc.)
  • Use technology to encourage writing (apps for phones and tablets that encourage drawing; stylus on some computers; save their work on the computer)

By doing these few recommendations, parents can encourage their children’s learning of literacy and help them prepare for kindergarten and the future.

Share this:

  • Tweet
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print

Like this:

Like Loading...

WRITTEN BY: James S. Bates, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Field Specialist

REVIEWED BY: OSU Extension Educators Polly Loy, MS (Belmont County), and Marie Economos, MS (Trumbull County).

SOURCES:

  • Effective Writing Practices:
  • Gerde, H. K., Bingham, G. E., & Wasik, B. A. (2012). Writing in early childhood classrooms: Guidance for best practices. Early Childhood Education Journal, DOI 10.1007/s10643-012-0531-z.
  • Dialogic Reading:
  • Justice, L. M., & Pullen, P. C. (2003). Promising interventions for promoting emergent literacy skills: Three evidence-based approaches. Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, 23(3), 99-113.
  • Whitehurst, G. J., Falco, F. L., Lonigan, C. J., Fischel, J. E., DeBaryshe, B. D., Valdez-Menchaca, M. C., et al. (1988). Accelerating language development through picture book reading. Developmental Psychology, 24, 552–559.

Categories: Family and Relationships

Avatar for Jim Bates
Avatar for Jim Bates

About Jim Bates

James S. Bates, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor and Extension Field Specialist of Family Wellness in Family and Consumer Sciences at The Ohio State University. His scholarship focuses on grandparent-grandchild relationships, family resilience, and program evaluation. He has written about human trafficking, co-parent education, reading and writing for school success, and aging. He is also involved in a number of research projects in Ohio, ranging from father-child relationships and food grilling to the impact of shale development in Appalachia Ohio.

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Recent Posts

Loving Kindness chart from self to world

Cultivating Loving-Kindness

Exploring the Heart of It All webinar series presented in Autumn 2024

pages of open book shaped into a heart

Making Every Day Sweet

I will serve 2024MLK

Unite, Serve, and Transform on MLK Day to Create the Beloved Community

Follow Us!

  • Facebook

Footer

Need Assistance?

If you are having issues logging into the site, need assistance with updates, or need to request an alternate format please send an email to the EHE Service Desk at servicedesk@ehe.osu.edu stating the nature of your issue and we will assist you. Thank you.
Are you a Live Smart Ohio Author? Log in here!

Categories

  • Food
  • Family and Relationships
  • Money
  • Mind and Body
  • Webinars

Follow us!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
The Ohio State University
FAMILY AND CONSUMER SCIENCES
COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN ECOLOGY
COLLEGE OF FOOD, AGRICULTURAL, AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES

© 2025 Live Smart Ohio - Family and Consumer Sciences | The Ohio State University - College of Education and Human Ecology | Accessibility | Privacy Policy

%d