Rosalie Reid Early Literacy
Sunday, June 9, 2013
A Note of Thanks!
I would like to say thank you to all my colleagues for your support and feedback. This was a very difficult class for me and as we move closer to the end I feel like I am still struggling. I could not have done it with out your comments through discussion post as well as comments on my blog. This is my last class at Kendall College, and it was nice working with everyone. Thanks again, and good luck to everyone in your future plans.
Monday, May 27, 2013
Enlisting and Providing Support
- Questions you have with which your colleagues may be able to provide help and support.
My advocacy plan is on Early
Literacy with a focus on parent involvement. I am presenting my plan in the form
of a power point. I have a lot of information on early literacy development and
I want to have a question and answer period. Do you think that I should answer
questions as I go through the slides or should I save the questions for the
end? Also, I do not want my presentation to be too long or too short, how long
do you think that the presentation should be so that I do not loose my
audience?
- Resources and information you are seeking.
I am no really seeking any
information on early literacy, but if any one can share website on parent
involvement I would appreciate it.
- Resources and/or information you have found helpful and insightful.
•
The
Community Tool Box. http://ctb.ku.edu
• No
Child Left Behind. www.ed.gov/nclb
• Reading
Rockets. www.readingrockets.org/families
• PBS
Parents. www.pbs.org/parents/readinglanguage/
• Ready
to Read. http://www.getreadytoread.org/early-learning-childhood-basics/early-literacy/building-literacy-every-day
• Children’s
Books and Reading. http://www.childrens-books-and-reading.com/early-literacy-activities.html
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Personal Advocacy Journey
“Tell me and I’ll forget, show me and I may remember;
involve me and I’ll understand.” Chinese proverb.
- What inspires and excites you most about your advocacy plan and being an advocate?
My advocacy topic is early
literacy. I chose this topic because I feel that for children to be successful
in school they need to have a good literacy foundation and that starts very
early in life. What inspired and excites me most about my advocacy plan is that
I will be helping children and families to promote early literacy development.
- What challenges and/or anxieties do you feel related to engaging in the advocacy efforts you have targeted?
Challenges and anxiety that I
feel is coming up with both short and long term goals that are SMART. I also
feel nervous about presenting my message to an audience. I am not comfortable
with public speaking or speaking to a group of people. This plan is important
to me so I am very nervous about presenting it.
- What do you believe will be most effective in helping you overcome any challenging emotions you may be feeling with regard to presenting and implementing your Advocacy Action Plan?
I feel that to over come
these challenges I need to continue to use the knowledge that I have gained
from colleagues’ feedback and read and revise my plan often and practice
presenting the plan.
- How can you encourage others in their advocacy efforts, and how can others encourage you?
Whatever topic we chose is
important to each of us, so do your best and keep revising your plan until you
are satisfied with the end result.
Friday, April 12, 2013
ECE 455-B1
Hi everyone, my name is Rosalie Reid. It is good to see some familiar names and looking forward to working with everyone. This is my last quarter and I am hoping it will be a smooth one. Good luck to everyone!
Friday, March 15, 2013
A note of Thanks and Support
As our class comes to an end I would like to take the time to say thank you to everyone. Thank you for your comments on our discussion post as well as the blog entries. Writing this paper was very difficult and stressful for me but thanks to everyone's encouraging comments I was able to get through it.
I also want to say thank you to Professor Puntil-Wilcek for your timely feedback. It was very helpful to me when writing my paper. I can truly say your feedback helped to take away some of my stress and put me on the right path. I have learned so much from you about writing a paper like this and I do appreciate it.
I know that we all chose different topics to advocate for, but I feel that in the end it is all in the best interest of the children. Good luck to everyone in what ever path you choose for here.
I also want to say thank you to Professor Puntil-Wilcek for your timely feedback. It was very helpful to me when writing my paper. I can truly say your feedback helped to take away some of my stress and put me on the right path. I have learned so much from you about writing a paper like this and I do appreciate it.
I know that we all chose different topics to advocate for, but I feel that in the end it is all in the best interest of the children. Good luck to everyone in what ever path you choose for here.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Observing and Interacting with Families
The person I interacted with was
one of the parents and her name is Amy. She has a child with special needs that
was non-verbal until recently, with other developmental delays. The child did
not speak, she just pointed to what she wanted and made sounds, she lack
self-help skills and has low muscle tone which cause her to shake. The child is
now enrolled in Head Start 75% of the school and the other 25% is spent in an
ESE classroom. Before she started Head Start she was full time in the ESE
classroom. The mother said she is extremely happy with the progress that the
child has made since being in the Head Start program. Because not only is she
talking more, she can have a simple conversation with her. She said that her
daughter comes home from school and talks about random things, or things she
thought to be random until she spoke with the teachers and found out that the
child was talking about a story that was read to her that day. She said that
with the teachers from both classrooms working together with the speech
pathologist, her daughter has come a long way since last school year.
I asked her about her thoughts on
advocacy in early literacy, and she informed me that she was not involved in
any advocacy work at this time but she was very interested. She also told me
that she does her part in helping the teachers and other parents by finding
websites with literacy activities and other resources and give the list to the
teachers to distribute to the parents and she donates electronic learning games
and videos to her child’s classrooms. She also said early literacy is not just
about learning to read and write, but it is also about learning to communicate.
She was very happy that her child is communicating with more words instead of
one word utterances.
Insights I have gained from the
conversation I had with this parent is that having open communication with
parents is very important. The parents need to be comfortable enough to open up
to ask for help. I have parents of children in my classroom right now who are
here illegally. They are most worried that we will call the immigration office
on them. So, I feel that when you communicate with the parents and assure them
that you are here to help them to help their children and nothing else, then
that is a starting point for building communication and trust.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Observing and Interacting With Program Director(s) and Other Administrative Staff in Your Setting
Name: Rosalie Reid
Date: 2/8/13
Name of Program/Setting: Head Start/Title1 Prek
Who I spoke with: J. Bringger, S. Redditt, and L. Pena
What I learned:
Mrs. Bringger is the Education
Coordinator for the Head Start program. While talking to Mrs. Bringger she
talked about how important it is to introduce language and literacy skills
early in children’s lives. She said we cannot wait too long to expose children
to the basic elements of reading; and parents must play a critical role. Both
parents and teachers should seek out daily opportunities to read with children.
She also said it is important for
parents to realize they need to be involved in their children’s understanding
of written language. She stated that print is a powerful means of communicating
knowledge and information. What I learned from her is that I should never stop
trying to get the parents involved in their children’s education. Continue to
help them by inviting them to the classroom to see what we do and continue to
encourage them to read and talk to their children often.
The other person I spoke with is
Ms. Redditt, the Curriculum and Instructional Coach for a new Title1 Pre-k
program. Ms. Redditt thinks that early literacy is very important and we as
teachers should support and engage students in developing their oral language
and language acquisition skills. She thinks that building a strong foundation
in oral language and providing children and families with support can help to
improve their early literacy skills. Also, making sure that the curriculum is
rigorous and provide students with the skills to be proficient when they enter
kindergarten, because the common core standards are at the top of everyone’s
list and making sure that the early literacy curriculum is providing students
with all the tools to be successful.
The other person I visited is Mrs.
L. Pena, a Head Start teacher. I observed Mrs. Pena at center time. The
students were engaged in various activities. I asked her about activities she
use to promote early literacy as well as activities for the parents to use at
home. She said they do a lot of shared reading and she also encourages the
parents to do the same. She also said she tells the parents to check the local
library for reading night and encourages them to make use of our parent
resource center to check out early literacy activities to use at home.
While I was in the classroom she
was working with a small group of children and they were “fishing for letters.”
The children had to take turns using a toy fishing pole with a magnetic tip to fish
for magnetic letters out of a basket. After catching a letter the children had
to name the letter and then write it down. So, the teacher was reinforcing letter
recognition as well as practicing printing.
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