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Caregiver-infant interaction promotes early literacy development

Author-Avatar deborah.chen@csun.edu

11/8/2016 6:09 AM

Turn-taking games and reading stories help young children develop early literacy skills. Check out the Center for Early Literacy Learning (CELL)

http://www.earlyliteracylearning.org A rich resource of evidence-based strategies to promote early literacy learning with infants, toddlers, and preschoolers with disabilities.

The website provides parent practice guides (English and Spanish) and practitioner practice guides with suggestions and strategies that are easy to understand and implement; videos; and research syntheses that review studies and summarize findings on a range of topics that provide the evidence-base for the practice guides. Some of my favorite research reviews address "Assistive technology and relationship to communication and literacy development"; "Influence of sign and oral interventions on the speech and oral language production of young children with disabilities"; "Tactile and object exploration among young children with visual impairment"; "Development of infant and toddler mark-making and scribbling"; and "Effects of reading to infants and toddlers on their language development"; and "Effects of adult verbal and vocal contingent responsiveness on increases in infant vocalization"

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