Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Tips For Helping Youngsters Link Written Words To Language

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2016 11:27 AM
    Reading to very young children is crucial to help them eventually learn to read. But researchers studying how kids begin to understand that text conveys meaning differently than pictures — an important concept for reading readiness — say parents should pay attention to writing, too. Some suggestions:
     
    —Run a finger under the text when reading to youngsters. Otherwise, kids pay more attention to the pictures and miss an opportunity to link written words to spoken language, said Brett Miller of the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development.
     
    —Show children how you write their names well before they could attempt it, said Temple University psychology professor Kathy Hirsh-Pasek. That's one of their first concrete examples that a mysterious squiggle on a page is a symbol for a word they know.
     
    —Often a child's name is his or her first written word, thanks to memorizing what it looks like. Encouraging youngsters to invent their own spellings of other words could spur them to write even more, said developmental psychologist Rebecca Treiman of Washington University in St. Louis.
     
    —When youngsters scribble, don't guess what they produced — ask, Hirsh-Pasek said. It's pretty discouraging if a tot's about to announce he wrote a story and mom thinks he drew a house.
     
    —Post a scribble they're proud of on the refrigerator, she said. Children are figuring out patterns with their scribbles, and that's more instructive than merely pasting copies of, say, apples onto a page to make a recognizable picture.
     
    —Give tots a pencil or pen instead of a crayon if they say they want to "write" rather than "draw" so it will look more like text, Treiman said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Used 'closer' To Finish Undercover B.C. Terror Operation: Senior Mountie

    RCMP Used 'closer' To Finish Undercover B.C. Terror Operation: Senior Mountie
    Insp. Stephen Corcoran has told B.C. Supreme Court that Staff-Sgt. Vaz Kassam joined the operation in June 2013, one week before a couple was arrested for plotting to bomb the B.C. Legislature on Canada Day.

    RCMP Used 'closer' To Finish Undercover B.C. Terror Operation: Senior Mountie

    Guru Granth Sahib Sacrilege: Punjab Police Arrest 2 Accused, Allege Foreign Hand, Funding

    Guru Granth Sahib Sacrilege: Punjab Police Arrest 2 Accused, Allege Foreign Hand, Funding
    The Punjab Police on Tuesday said it has arrested two brothers for alleged involvement in the desecration of the Guru Granth Sahib and revealed they were getting instructions and funding from handlers in Australia and Dubai.

    Guru Granth Sahib Sacrilege: Punjab Police Arrest 2 Accused, Allege Foreign Hand, Funding

    One Man Critically Injured In Targeted Shooting In B.C.'s North Okanagan

    One Man Critically Injured In Targeted Shooting In B.C.'s North Okanagan
    A 55-year-old man remains in hospital with critical gunshot wounds after an attack near Enderby, B.C.

    One Man Critically Injured In Targeted Shooting In B.C.'s North Okanagan

    Liberal Wave Reaches Metro Vancouver As Rest Of B.C. Splits Along Party Lines

    Liberal Wave Reaches Metro Vancouver As Rest Of B.C. Splits Along Party Lines
    The map of election winners in British Columbia mirrored the political spectrum after Monday's election — NDP on the left, Conservatives on the right and Liberals down the middle.

    Liberal Wave Reaches Metro Vancouver As Rest Of B.C. Splits Along Party Lines

    19 Indian-Canadians Elected To Canadian Parliament

    19 Indian-Canadians Elected To Canadian Parliament
    The Indian-Canadians more than doubled their representation in the Canadian parliament from eight to 19 as Canadians voted out the Conservative Party by handing out a landslide to the Liberal Party on Monday.

    19 Indian-Canadians Elected To Canadian Parliament

    Justin Trudeau Emerges As Political Force In Own Right, Out From Father's Shadow

    Justin Trudeau Emerges As Political Force In Own Right, Out From Father's Shadow
    OTTAWA — It seems somehow fitting that the son of the man who first fired up political passion in Stephen Harper should be the person to usher him out of politics.

    Justin Trudeau Emerges As Political Force In Own Right, Out From Father's Shadow