Becoming Literate

Cover of Becoming Literate by Marie Clay
Author: Marie Clay
Publisher: Heinemann
Year: 1991
Language: en
Edition: 2nd
Pages: 372
ISBN-13: 9780435085742
Dimensions:
Height: 9.1 Inches
Length: 6 Inches
Weight: 1.43741394824 Pounds
Width: 0.86 Inches
Dewey Decimal: 372.4
Editorial overview Touché

Becoming Literate by Marie Clay, published by Heinemann on April 15, 1991, is a comprehensive exploration of early literacy instruction. This second edition, spanning 372 pages, delves into the various programs that teach children about stories, words, letters, and sounds during their formative years. Clay argues that successful readers develop an inner strategic control over print, which is often lacking in struggling readers, highlighting the importance of competencies learned through diverse educational experiences.

In this book, readers will find insights into how children learn to process texts independently through interactions with parents and teachers. Clay emphasizes that successful literacy development involves a gradual mastery of strategies that enable children to engage with print autonomously. The text discusses the significance of oral language control in preschool children and how it supports their ability to construct sentences and extend their language systems. This exploration provides educators with a framework for understanding how different approaches to literacy can lead to similar outcomes for diverse learners.


Official synopsis Publisher

Children are taught about stories, words, letters, and sounds in many different programs in their first years of literacy instruction. In this book Marie Clay argues that underlying the progress of successful children there is another level of competencies being learned. Successful readers show a gradual control over how readers or writers can work with print even though they learn in very different programs. This inner strategic control is what failing readers do not seem to build.

Successful readers begin very early to learn myriad of things which support their independent processing of texts. They do this learning in interaction with parents and teachers, but they gradually come to control ways of working on print which free them to learn independently from literacy encounters.

This concept helps us to understand how teachers can bring different children by different routes to similar outcomes. It allows for different children to start literacy learning in different ways. It is widely accepted that preschool children construct a control over oral language that enables them to produce sentences which they have never heard before, and extend their own language systems through conversation. When our observations of readers and writers show that they have developed effective strategies for monitoring their own ways of working on texts, we can be confident that this control will, at a later stage, allow them to work independently as silent readers of unseen texts.
The concept that only the child can construct this inner control develops Clay’s earlier description of the complex behaviors which support literacy learning.

FAQ
What is “Becoming Literate” about?
This page includes the available description and bibliographic details for “Becoming Literate” by Marie Clay. Synopsis preview: Children are taught about stories, words, letters, and sounds in many different programs in their first years of literacy instruction. In this book Marie Clay argues that underlying the progress of successful children th…
Who is the author of “Becoming Literate”?
“Becoming Literate” is credited to Marie Clay.
When was “Becoming Literate” published?
Publisher: Heinemann. Year: 1991.
What is the ISBN for “Becoming Literate”?
ISBN-13: 9780435085742.
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
Language: en. Pages: 372. Edition: 2nd.

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