| This article first appeared in the September 2004 issue of Literacy
Today (issue no. 40). |
Julie Dockrell, Morag Stuart and Diane King of the University of London
discuss the importance of oral language development in the early years and
report on their research initiative, Talking Time, for children in nurseries.
The importance of oral language skills is now firmly positioned in the National
Literacy Strategy and in the Stepping Stones outlined for the Foundation
Stage curriculum. Throughout these documents the emphasis is on using the
whole curriculum to provide opportunities for modelling "appropriate speaking
and listening".
The focus on language for communication and language acquisition within
communicative contexts is supported by much of the recent language acquisition
research. Young children are more likely to use those words and grammatical
phrases that they are exposed to in natural interactions with their carers.
Thus the carer's use of language acts as a fundamental support for early
language development. Speaker's intentions help guide children in their
word learning and provide an important forum for developing awareness
of the pragmatics of language.
Nearly all of this research is based on studies that focus on the opportunities
offered by interaction between a child and an adult. For many children
these early interactions will provide the initial foundations for developing
the more sophisticated aspects of language outlined in the recently published
National Strategy for Speaking and Listening. These build on and extend
the approach first outlined in Teaching speaking and listening in Key
Stages 1 and 2 (QCA, 1999).
Many children, however, will not have had sufficient exposure to the
kinds of language they will encounter in nurseries and schools. Both the
amount and the nature of the oral language input children receive impacts
on their subsequent language development and there are significant differences
in the amount of oral language input pre-school children experience. The
language models provided by adults and peers have a significant impact
on a child's developing oral language skills.
Adult recasts of children's utterances and the drawing of appropriate
contrasts between words and grammatical constructions are particularly
important. In a recast, the adult replies to the child's utterance by
copying some of the child's words but also by providing new syntactic
or semantic information. The basic details of the child's original meaning
are maintained. For example, the child's statement, "It go there" when
describing where a paint brush should be placed, can be recast by the
adult as, "Yes, the brush goes in the pot". Recasts have been shown to
stimulate length and complexity of utterances in children.
In addition contrasts between words provide children with information
about the concepts signified by different words and support the development
of a rich vocabulary system. The introduction of a new colour term can
be contrasted with known colour terms or the introduction of a new size
term can be contrasted with known size terms - "It is not the big one,
it is the tiny one". This relationship between oral language exposure
and oral language acquisition holds across a range of situations including
bilingual language acquisition and acquisition for children with specific
communication difficulties.
For some children the environmental opportunity to develop language is
less rich than for others. Moreover, not all children are equally equipped
to learn from the English language experiences they receive: English may
be an additional language; they may experience hearing problems, such
as otitis media; or the children may have additional special educational
needs. These differential opportunities are not a trivial factor since
early language skills can have long lasting effects on later academic
attainment; it has been estimated, for example, that vocabulary assessed
at age six is a strong predictor of reading comprehension at age 16. Thus,
differences in children's experiences have an important impact on how
prepared the child is to take advantage of the language exposures that
are offered in nurseries and schools. For many children the further exposures
they receive in nurseries and schools will be of significant importance
in moderating the effects of these early differences.
Findings from longitudinal studies support the view that gains in receptive
and expressive language skills can occur as a result of participation
in quality nursery provision, yet current evidence suggests that, on the
whole, pre-school settings are not sensitive language learning environments.
They are dominated by teacher talk and this talk has been criticised as
being overly directive and unresponsive. The role of teacher talk and
the conversational style of the teacher are moderated by a number of variables
including the size of the group of children working with a teacher. Our
own research in 12 inner-city nurseries has extended these findings. We
found that, while in many cases there were excellent small group opportunities
that supported oral language development, many children did not have sufficient
opportunity to develop their oral language competence. Frequently the
children chose to spend large amounts of time in contexts where less supportive
language was evident, such as playgrounds and free play. All nurseries
offered exposure to books but this frequently occurred in large group
settings where children did not have the chance to benefit from the teacher's
language scaffolds.
In 2000 we devised a project called Talking Time that aimed to address
some of the inequities in children's early language skills. Our aim was
to place children in a better position to take advantage of the oral language
they would be exposed to in primary school. Talking Time supports the
goals of the foundation stage level curriculum by providing opportunities
for children to communicate their thoughts, ideas and feelings and by
giving opportunities to share stories and experiences. However, we realised
that to do this children needed to experience small group opportunities
with staff skilled in supporting oral language. Staff also needed to recognise
and build on the children's current levels of functioning. We introduced
our activities to staff working in inner-city nurseries. Many of the children
in the nurseries, the majority of whom had English as a second language,
were neither speaking nor understanding at the expected level for their
age - indeed the children's oral language was, on average, two years behind
what would be expected. Staff were provided with in-service sessions that
considered oral language development, the skills of the children in their
nurseries and the ways in which oral language could be supported.
Talking Time was built around three activities designed to increase:
1. children's vocabulary, through the use of specially chosen drama activities
2. predictive use of language, through the use of open ended questioning
3. narrative skill, through the use of sets of pictures from familiar
tasks and activities.
Children 'worked' twice a week in groups of five or six for a period
of six months. The groups comprised children with varying levels of oral
language competence, which ensured a variety of child and adult talk.
Fidelity of the intervention was ensured by weekly visits to the nursery
and children's language skills were assessed at the beginning and end
of the intervention. We compared the progress of children in the Talking
Time intervention to that of children given the same amount of additional
small group exposure just to storybook reading, and to that of children
experiencing good pre-school nursery provision.
To date the results of the study are promising. Children in the Talking
Time intervention made significantly more progress than children in the
alternative intervention in terms of both their receptive and expressive
vocabulary: they both understood and produced more words than the comparison
children. Talking Time also impacted on syntactic development, with significantly
more progress in the Talking Time children's ability to repeat increasingly
complex sentences, and to produce longer sentences in their own oral language
production. Thus, there was evidence that the building blocks of narrative
skill were beginning to be put in place.
However, despite this pleasing acceleration of progress, the overall
language skills of the children were still a cause for concern. On a standardised
test of expressive vocabulary, the overall mean score for the 'Talking
Time'children put them at the 15th percentile of the population (i.e.
85 per cent of children of their age would perform better than this).
Their mean score on a standardised test of verbal comprehension put them
at the 10th percentile (i.e. 90 per cent of children of this age would
perform better than this). In contrast, on a standardised measure of non-verbal
cognitive ability, their mean score put them at the 45th percentile, i.e.
well within the normal range.
So, we have a mixed message to convey. With carefully planned, structured
and monitored language input, it is certainly possible to accelerate the
development of children's oral language skills, to enable them to start
catching up with their peers. However, a programme lasting for only six
months is not enough to get the children to where they ought to be. We
would like to see Talking Time built into the nursery curriculum throughout
the children's time in nursery, and extended to continue throughout the
Reception Year.
Devising a supportive framework for oral language is not easy. Careful
preparation is needed to ensure that all children receive these experiences
on a regular basis in naturally occurring interactions. Moreover, it is
not sufficient simply to provide 'good models'; the language from the
adult needs to be carefully tuned to the child's language. It needs to
be offered in such a way as to extend and support, and children need plenty
of opportunity to practise their fledgling skills. This is especially
challenging where children enter nurseries using only a few words and
with limited English language comprehension.
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