Reading and the Brain: Understanding How Learners Build Basic Reading Literacy Skills
How does the brain acquire basic reading literacy skills and what are literacy skills? As you choose appropriate strategies to build your young learners’ reading abilities, it’s important to understand the internal command center that processes and builds these competencies. The generally agreed building blocks of reading include phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension.
Here we’ll take a closer look at each of these five areas to appreciate the underlying brain development that occurs and how this can affect the instructional approach you take with your students within basic literacy lessons.
1. Phonemic Awareness
Definition: The ability to hear, identify, manipulate, and substitute phonemes—the smallest units of sound that can differentiate meaning—in spoken words.
The best way to think about phonemic awareness is to compare it to hearing in the dark. Learning to orally manipulate the approximate 41 phonemes in the English language doesn’t require being able to read printed letters. Instead, through phonemic awareness strategies, the brain is able to learn individual phonemes, then progress to join phonemes, and finally, to build words with phonemes.
As you consider this progression, it becomes obvious that, as part of developing phonemic awareness, the introduction of phonics skills must quickly follow. Research shows that teaching sounds along with letters of the alphabet helps students better understand how phonemic awareness relates to their reading and writing.
2 .Phonics
Definition: The ability to understand that there is a predictable relationship between phonemes (sounds) and graphemes (the letters that represent those sounds in written language) in order to associate written letters with the sounds of spoken language.
Phonics is the crucial link between what learners hear and how they read and write. Known as “cracking the code” on reading, phonics instruction is most effective when children start around the age of five.
Critics of phonics instruction argue that the English language includes many irregular spellings that don’t incorporate predictable phonics patterns. However, phonics instruction teaches children a system for remembering how to read words. Once children learn, for example, that phone is spelled this way rather than foan, their brain commits the spelling to memory, which, in turn, helps them read, spell, and recognize the word instantly. Building a memory bank of letter-sound relationships through systematic and sequenced instruction is found to be an effective approach to building phonics skills.
3. Fluency
Definition: The ability to read text accurately, quickly, and expressively, either to oneself or aloud.
Fluency is critical to building a child’s motivation to read in the first place. When the brain has to focus on what each word means, reading becomes a laborious task that prevents students from gathering meaning. Once fluency skills are developed, though, students are able to recognize words and comprehend them at the same time.
Fluency develops gradually over considerable time with the repeated, accurate sounding out of words. For young readers who regularly interact with the same texts over and over again, fluency might be mistaken for memorization. At this point, students may know what a word “looks like” but may not have yet developed the correct neural-phonological models of the word.
As students begin to acquire words more easily, they should also practice dividing text into meaningful chunks, knowing when to pause and change intonation and tone. With regular guidance and feedback, students begin to recognize these cues during reading and develop deeper comprehension. Fluent readers practice reading consistently and can demonstrate their skills through natural reading that sounds as if they are speaking.
4. Vocabulary
Definition: The growing, stored compilation of words that students understand and use in their conversation (oral vocabulary) and recognize in print (reading vocabulary).
The good news is that children are born to learn new words! Studies show there are direct links between how many words children hear spoken at home and how well they excel by the age of eight. This is because most vocabulary is learned indirectly—meaning it is absorbed in the brain through everyday experiences, i.e., via conversation, from being read aloud to by adults, or from independent reading. For those children who don’t experience these events regularly, vocabulary often suffers.
New readers use their oral vocabulary to make sense of the words they see in print. During early reading, students mentally search for a word in their vocabulary that matches the written word they see on the page. When their oral vocabulary comes up short, reading is momentarily interrupted. That new word must be learned, in both form and meaning, before it can be added to their mental vocabulary.
It goes without saying that readers cannot understand what they are reading without knowing what most of the words mean. This being the case, direct instruction of explicitly taught vocabulary, as well as word-learning strategies, can help build a flourishing vocabulary and improve reading fluency and comprehension.
5. Reading literacy skills: Comprehension
Definition: The ability to understand, remember, and make meaning of what has been read—this is the purpose for reading.
Comprehension puts all the pieces together to make a student become a proficient reader. Even before students are reading for themselves, they can begin practicing comprehension skills when books are read aloud to them. Predicting, inferring, making connections, and analyzing what is read are all skills that can be modeled and practiced with an adult and help prepare students to do this work independently.
Students who have mastered the technique of comprehension are both purposeful and active readers. They use metacognitive strategies to think about the purpose of what they’re reading and monitor their own understanding as they read. This allows these students to isolate and feed back where they have a lack of understanding, which, in turn, opens doors for them to apply specific strategies to attain that understanding.
For additional information on proven approaches to teaching key reading strategies in the classroom and at home, take a look at the full teacher’s guide, Put Reading First: The Research Building Blocks for Teaching Children to Read, Kindergarten through Grade 3, from the Center for the Improvement of Early Reading Achievement.
To find out more about how Edmentum can support the development of your students’ foundational skills and basic literacy skills, read our blog for more information on our Foundational Skills Instruction service with EdOptions Academy.
Reading Literacy Skills Frequently Asked Questions
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