Join Our Family
My Account
Molly Brave logo
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Store
  • Blog
  • Activities
  • Contact
  • Blog

    • All Categories
    • For Parents and Teachers
    • Recommended Books
    • Resources
    • News
    • Mentorship With Mary Alice – An Introduction
      • How To Begin Writing For Children
    • Independent, Hybrid and Self-Publishing

Tag: Monique Senechal

Sight Words Are So 2016: New Study Finds the Real Key to Early Literacy

Published on June 11, 2017 | In Blog, For Parents and Teachers, News | 0 Comment

written for parent.co by
Kate Koch-Sundquist posted on April 12, 2017  Click here to read the entire article on the importance of invented spelling.

It’s no secret that teaching a child to read is a pretty big deal. Research has proven again and again that children who grasp early literacy skills by the end of first grade become strong readers for the rest of their lives, while those who struggle early on continue to do so throughout their schooling. So, no pressure, right?

This is exactly why, when it came time to choose a focus for my career in education, I opted for the upper elementary grades. Multiplying fractions? Thesis statements? Identifying the author’s purpose? Those I can handle. Reading? No, thank you.

But as the mom of two preschoolers, early literacy skills are back on the table now.

Last year, I sat across from my son’s preschool teacher as she calmly shrugged and told me that he wasn’t yet showing interest in letter recognition nor writing his own name. On the surface, I copied her even, close-mouthed smile and nodded as she assured me that this was not unusual for a boy his age. On the inside, I felt my heart pound while I mentally outlined the things I should have been doing at home to encourage his early literacy.

A year later, though, with no interventions from me or his teacher, my son began to write his name and became obsessed with letters, letter sounds, and letter recognition. He just needed the time and space to come to this understanding himself.

We were lucky that his fall birthday meant he narrowly missed the kindergarten cut off and had an extra year in preschool. We were lucky he was given the time and space to come to his own understanding in his own time.

But what happens when time and space aren’t available? What happens when children in kindergarten are pushed towards early reading, even if they are not developmentally ready?

A 2010 article in the Harvard Education Letter points out that modern children are still meeting developmental milestones at the same ages as children studied in the 1920s. That is, children’s abilities have not changed over the past century. The educational standards they’re held to have, however.

With the introduction of Common Core Standards, kindergarteners are now required to read, write, and even participate in research projects. This is a stark contrast to the play-based kindergarten of the 1980s. Is the emphasis on sight word memorization and explicit reading instruction misguided?

A new study seems to point to yes.

Published in the January 2017 issue of the journal “Developmental Psychology”, the study concludes that the most valuable early literacy skill to encourage in kindergarten is neither alphabetic knowledge nor memorization of key sight words. In fact, it’s not a reading skill at all.

The best indicator of future success as a reader is actually a child’s ability to use invented spelling as he writes.

"Results supported a model in which invented spelling contributed directly to concurrent reading along with alphabetic knowledge and phonological awareness."  (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

Leave A Message

Landmark Study Finds Better Path to Reading, proves what exemplary teachers have been doing correctly for years!

Published on June 11, 2017 | In Blog, For Parents and Teachers, News | 0 Comment

J. Richard Gentry Ph.D.
J. Richard Gentry Ph.D.

In a landmark study two Canadian researchers in developmental psychology, Gene Ouellette and Monique Sénéchal (2017), have mapped the powerful beginning reading-writing connection, moved us closer to being successful teachers of reading in first grade, and cleared up decades of confusion. It’s important because reading scores in first grade have flatlined for decades—especially in the United States. This study can move us forward.

As far back as 1982 Marie Clay, the late world-renowned expert in developmental and clinical child psychology who founded Reading Recovery, issued a call for educators to find the writing connection in learning to read (Clay, 1982). Could teachers and parents capitalize on the potential for beginning writing to complement learning to read? Should we be encouraging pencil and paper activity from the very beginning?

Ouellette and Sénéchal have mapped out the way. Counterintuitively, it turns out that allowing and encouraging children’s early “invented spelling”—a much maligned and controversial practice in some quarters—is the key.

What is Invented Spelling?   Click here to read the Psychology Today article.

 
 

Leave A Message

© 2025 Molly Brave, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

  • Store
  • Blog
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms of Use
  • Contact