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Hammack, Barbara G.; Foote, Martha M.; Garretson, Stephen; Thompson, Josh – Young Children, 2012
It is important for teachers to engage families in ways that develop a positive link between home and school. Using family literacy packs can create such a link. Originally designed for K-grade 2, the packs have been successfully adapted for young children of all ages. Early childhood teachers send children home with these packs, which include…
Descriptors: Family Literacy, Young Children, Elementary School Students, Parents as Teachers
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Baskwill, Jane; Harkins, Mary Jane – Young Children, 2009
From an early age, young children, when given the opportunity, demonstrate their interest and enthusiasm for writing. Toddlers spontaneously pick up pencils and crayons to make marks on paper, walls, and floors. Preschoolers' scribbles are indications of their growing understanding of how print and story work. Their oral stories are often…
Descriptors: Photography, Childrens Writing, Role Models, Young Children
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Crawford, Elizabeth Outlaw; Heaton, Emily T.; Heslop, Karen; Kixmiller, Kassandra – Young Children, 2009
Families' involvement in their children's science learning at home has numerous benefits, especially when they support children's self-initiated investigations. In a position statement on parental involvement in science education, the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA 2009) stresses the role of parents in the daily reinforcement of…
Descriptors: Space Sciences, Parent Participation, Parent Role, Physical Sciences
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McVicker, Claudia J. – Young Children, 2007
"Emergent literacy" means that a young child's communication skills are in the emerging state. Clearly, the child's environment is supremely important in nurturing this emerging literacy (Morrow 1995). Children cannot become literate alone. They need the help of others to claim their own unique literacy. Although most parents recognize that they…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Young Children, Communication Skills, Environmental Influences
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Tharp, Roland; Entz, Susan – Young Children, 2003
Details five standards, from preschool through middle school, present in successful programs for students at risk of academic failure: joint productive activity, language and literacy across the curriculum, contextualization, challenging activities, and instructional conversation. Compares NAEYC's developmentally appropriate practices to the…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Developmental Continuity, Developmentally Appropriate Practices, Educational Practices
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DiNatale, Lorenza – Young Children, 2002
Discusses the need for early childhood programs to develop strong partnerships with families in order to support each parent's role as his or her child's primary educator and to provide a foundation for ongoing family involvement. Outlines the steps for establishing high-quality parent involvement programs and offers examples of how parents can…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Family Involvement, Outreach Programs, Parent Participation
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Brock, Dana R.; Dodd, Elizabeth L. – Young Children, 1994
Describes how preschools and elementary schools can establish a Family Lending Library to make available to parents books on the reading process, literacy, and child development, as well as books they can read to their children. The library can also contain videotapes, toys, and a variety of materials that address the uniqueness of each family.…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Early Childhood Education, Emergent Literacy, Parent Education
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Melmed, Matthew – Young Children, 1997
Surveyed parents' knowledge and beliefs about early development, information and support sources, and receptivity to new information. Found that parents learn about development after becoming parents, feel most able to impact emotional development, do not see the full significance of early childhood, are concerned about caregiver continuity and…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Rearing, Developmental Psychology, Early Experience
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Kokoski, Teresa M.; Downing-Leffler, Nancy – Young Children, 1995
Proposes the home-school connection as a key solution to boost science, mathematics, and technology programs in schools. Suggests that professionals in education must find ways to make connections between school learning and children's learning outside school. Proposes appropriate strategies such as science and mathematics backpacks, minimuseums,…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Early Childhood Education, Educational Change, Experiential Learning
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Kupetz, Barbara N.; Green, Elise Jepson – Young Children, 1997
Notes that reading aloud to children is the single most important activity for assuring success in reading. Describes types of children's books and offers guidelines for book selection. Discusses several guidelines that help early childhood professionals experience successful infant and toddler book reading sessions, and includes bibliography of…
Descriptors: Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Early Childhood Education, Educational Strategies
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Hostetler, Lana – Young Children, 1991
Discusses ways for early childhood professionals to meet the objectives contained in the first of the National Education Goals for the Year 2000: the goal concerning readiness for school. (BB)
Descriptors: Birth Weight, Child Advocacy, Child Health, Developmentally Appropriate Practices
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Gorter-Reu, Maralee S.; Anderson, Jean Marie – Young Children, 1998
The Home Kit/Home Visit Program--designed for children needing reinforcement of basic concepts and knowledge of colors, shapes, numbers, letter recognition, and letter-sound correspondence--is proving successful in encouraging parent involvement in first-graders' learning of basic skills. Parents are provided with home learning kits to guide their…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Early Intervention, Elementary School Students, Home Instruction
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Cohen, Lynn E. – Young Children, 1997
Suggests involving parents more fully in their child's reading, by sending books from school to be shared at home. Describes a program that groups several books by theme or author in a backpack, along with a book for parents, a response notebook, and inventory card. Suggests funding sources and management concerns for such a program, and includes…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Childrens Literature, Family Involvement, Family School Relationship