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Rose Review

  • Interim Report - Extracts from The Independent Review of the Teaching of Early Reading, Interim Report, by Jim Rose, December 2005
  • Response - TTYB joins other organisations concerned with early language and literacy to respond to Interim Report (January 2006)
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Interim Report - Extracts from the Independent Review of the Teaching of Early Reading, by Jim Rose, December 2005

Summary
The development of speaking and listening skills requires fuller and more intensive attention to make sure that children acquire a good stock of words, learn to listen attentively, and speak clearly and confidently. These skills are the foundations of phonic work, for example, in building phonemic awareness. Moreover, they are prime communication skills, hugely important in their own right and central to children's intellectual, social and emotional development.

Listening and speaking
An important, albeit obvious, early marker needs to be entered here that listening and speaking are the roots of reading and writing. From a wide range of contributors, as well as from inspection evidence, the indications are that settings and schools need to do more to boost listening and speaking skills across the curriculum. For instance, Ofsted noted recently in an overview report on English that:

Too little attention has been given to teaching the full National Curriculum programme of study for speaking and listening and the range of contexts provided for speaking and listening remains too limited.

Obviously, attention to speaking and listening at the earliest stages is especially important for children who enter settings and schools with limited language skills.

Learning is very much a social and a socialising activity for young children. Settings and schools provide massive opportunities and unique advantages for developing their speaking and listening skills. Such development depends upon creating conditions for children to interact with others: to engage frequently in worthwhile talk and attentive listening, build a good stock of words, explore how language works, understand what is said to them and respond appropriately - well before reading begins. The best work with young children also draws frequently on the power of story, drama and music to fire their imagination and enrich their language. The importance for young children of learning co-operatively in language-rich contexts cannot be over-stated.

Settings and schools should therefore give a high priority to the development of children's speaking and listening skills, both because they are intrinsically valuable and because they provide the foundations for the systematic teaching and learning of phonics, and higher order reading and writing skills.

Interim recommendations include:

Best practice
Greater attention should be given to the development of children's speaking and listening skills because they are intrinsically valuable and because they provide the foundations for high quality phonic work.

The Early Years Foundation Stage

Work throughout the Foundation Stage should provide a rich, language environment that develops children's speaking and listening skills, helps them to understand what is said to them, and builds their confidence in speaking to others.

Response to the Interim Report of the Independent Review of the Teaching of Early Reading

This response comes from a number of organisations concerned with early language and literacy. Collectively we welcome and endorse the emphasis on speaking and listening skills outlined in the report. In particular, we are pleased to note the recognition of the importance of speaking and listening skills not only as the foundation for literacy learning but also for intellectual, social and emotional development.

Although not mentioned in the report, we also note and welcome the recent launch of the substantial Communicating Matters training material, produced by the DfES, Sure Start and the Primary National Strategy. If this training (or similar) was to be implemented through all Local Authorities it would ensure that everyone working with children in the early years would have a sound understanding of children's communication and language development, and it would deepen their understanding of how their own communicative behaviour impacts on children. Similarly, this topic should be included in all forms of pre-service training. As the materials note, all early years practitioners are teachers of communication and language.

The Interim Report also highlights that communication and language are best learned in a rich communicative environment. Empowering parents to provide this kind of support in the home is a significant part of the work that we all do, as we believe that parents are their child's first and most enduring teachers and need the confidence and knowledge to play their part. There are some excellent programmes in place in the community, informing and supporting parents as they learn to read, sing and communicate fully with their young children.

We hope that the Final Report will urge compulsion to train children's service staff so that they are fully equipped to support children and parents in the vital matter of early language and communication skills.

Liz Attenborough, Talk To Your Baby
Rosemary Clarke, Bookstart
Jenny Cobley, Basic Skills Agency
Kamini Gadhok, Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists
Clare Geldard, I CAN
Linda Lascelles, Afasic
Neil McClelland, National Literacy Trust
Peter Silva, Peers Early Education Partnership
Nicole Walker, Early Years Library Network

January 2006

 

 

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