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Communication Disorders Quarterly
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Contextualized Approach to Language and Literacy (Project CALL)

Capitalizing on Varied Activities and Contexts to Teach Early Literacy Skills

Barbara Culatta

Brigham Young University

Kendra Hall

Brigham Young University

Dana Kovarsky

University of Rhode Island

Geraldine Theadore

University of Rhode Island

In a federally funded early literacy project, various instructional activities were embedded into an array of classroom contexts to provide supplemental literacy instruction and to contrast children's engagement and participation in different contexts and participant structures. The study was conducted with English- and Spanish-speaking children from four Head Start classrooms. In a crossover project design, children were trained on similar sets of rhyme and letter targets at different times. Three-way ANOVAs with rhyme and letter difference scores as the dependent variables revealed a significant time-of-test effect for rhyming and significant Time x Order x Set interactions for rhyme and letter generation. Children performed better on trained than untrained targets. Observations of children revealed growth in performance and spontaneity of rhyme skills in classroom contexts. Qualitative analyses documented high levels of engagement, illustrating the value of varying activities and contexts for instruction. Both groups demonstrated their ability to gain from concrete instruction and interactive participation.

Key Words: rhyming • letter knowledge • early literacy • participant structures • contextualized instruction

Communication Disorders Quarterly, Vol. 28, No. 4, 216-235 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1525740107311813


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