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An Introduction to Reach Out and Read

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Title: An Introduction to Reach Out and Read


1
An Introduction to Reach Out and Read
  • Provider Training Workshop
  • Reach Out and Read National Center
  • 56 Roland Street
  • Suite 100D
  • Boston, MA 02129
  • 617-455-0600

2
Training Objectives
  • Describe the ROR model of pediatric literacy
    promotion
  • Discuss importance of reading aloud
  • Explain anticipatory guidance for parents about
    books and reading
  • Review milestones of childrens early literacy
    development
  • Present some relevant research

3
The Mission of Reach Out and Read
To make literacy promotion a standard part of
pediatric primary care, so that children grow up
with books and a love of reading.
4
Three Components of Reach Out and Read
  • Medical providers encourage parents to read aloud
    and offer anticipatory guidance
  • At every health supervision visit, children aged
    6 mos.- 5 years receive a new developmentally-appr
    opriate book
  • The waiting room is made into a literacy-rich
    environment with displays, gently used books, and
    volunteer readers.

5
Reach Out and Read June 2007
  • Founded in 1989 at Boston City Hospital by
  • Barry Zuckerman, MD
  • Robert Needlman, MD
  • Kathleen Fitzgerald Rice, MS Ed
  • Over 3,500 locations
  • Over 47,000 providers trained
  • Over 3 million children reached annually
  • Over 4.9 million books distributed per year

6
Reading, Language, and Brain Development
  • Childrens language evolves primarily through
    parent-child interactions by two years of age,
    childrens language correlates with later
    cognitive performance
  • The architecture of the brain is shaped by early
    experiences cognitive skills associated with
    books--memory, creativity, comprehension,
    language--stimulate brain development

7
Benefits of Reading Aloud
  • Reading aloud to children
  • Fosters language development
  • Promotes reading skills
  • Prepares children for school success
  • Motivates children to love books

8
Verbal Responsiveness Why its Important
  • Repeating and expanding reinforces a childs
    communicative attempts and offers advanced
    language
  • Labeling and describing emphasizes that objects
    have names (symbolic representations)
  • Questioning promotes verbal exchanges between
    parent and child
  • Emphasizing sounds and letters increases a
    childs phonological awareness

9
Reading Aloud and School Readiness(National
Center for Educational Statistics, 1999)
10
The Importance of Emerging Literacy (National
Research Center, 1999)
  • Children at risk for reading difficulties are
    those who start school with
  • lower verbal skills
  • less phonological awareness
  • less letter knowledge
  • less familiarity with the processes
  • of reading

11
Children from Low-Income Families
  • Low-income status significantly predicts
    childrens exposure to language (Bloom, 1998)
  • Children from low-income families are far less
    likely to be read to on a daily basis (National
    Research Council, 1999)

12
Literacy-Rich Waiting Rooms
  • Displays and information about libraries, reading
    aloud, and adult and family literacy
    organizations
  • Gently used books should be available
  • Volunteer readers (where appropriate)
  • Model reading aloud techniques, varying voices
  • Show parents how books can entertain and create a
    bond between child and parent

13
ROR in the Exam Room
  • The provider gives the child a developmentally
    appropriate book at each well-child visitthats
    10 books by kindergarten!
  • The book is introduced EARLY in the visit
  • The book is accompanied by anticipatory guidance
    for the parent, and by modeling
  • The provider uses the book to assess the childs
    developmentmotor, cognitive, social, language

14
Anticipatory Guidance
  • Underscore reading aloud is important even before
    a child can talk, and it promotes the childs
    love of books
  • Trigger questions
  • Have you and (childs name) begun to look at
    books yet?
  • What are some things that you and (childs name)
    do at bedtime?

15
More anticipatory guidance
  • Introduce the book early in the visit
  • Mary is chewing on the book. Babies like to do
    that.
  • Babies like pictures of babies.
  • Encourage parent to talk about the book
  • Wheres the baby? Wheres the babys nose?
  • Point and name or describe objects
  • Relate the book to childs experiences (He has a
    sister, just like you.)

16
More Anticipatory Guidance
  • Give parents age-appropriate expectations
  • 6-month-old babies put books in their mouth
  • 12-month-olds can point with one finger
  • 18-month-olds can turn board book pages
  • 2-year-olds may not sit still to listen to a book
  • 3-year-olds can retell familiar stories

17
The Book as Assessment Tool
  • Use the book to assess childs development
  • Fine motor development
  • (maturity of grasp, hand skills)
  • Social/emotional interaction
  • Cognitive skills
  • (attention, memory)
  • Expressive and receptive language
  • (vocabulary and comprehension)

18
Which Books to Choose
  • For 6-12-month-olds
  • Board pages
  • Pictures and faces
  • Bright colors
  • Familiar objects
  • Limited text / small size

19
6-12 Months
  • Parent
  • Lets child explore book
  • Holds child in lap
  • Responds verbally
  • Labels
  • Talks during routines
  • Child
  • Reaches for book
  • Puts book in mouth
  • Sits in lap
  • Communicates through gestures and early
    utterances
  • Begins to understand a few words

20
Which Books to Choose
  • For 12-24-month-olds
  • Board pages
  • Familiar objects
  • Relevant to childs life
  • Rhyming words
  • Animal or shape-focused

21
12-18 Months
  • Child
  • Holds book
  • Turns board pages
  • Turns book right side up
  • Points when asked where is--?
  • Points to pictures
  • Imitates parents vocals
  • Parent
  • Lets child control book
  • Asks where is---?
  • Labels/describes
  • Sings songs/rhymes
  • Reads as part of routine

22
18- 24 Months
  • Parent
  • Lets child control book
  • Re-reads stories!!
  • Engages in verbal turn-taking
  • Labels /describes
  • Points and asks Whats that?
  • Relates books to childs own experiences
  • Child
  • Turns pages
  • Carries book around
  • Fills in words of stories
  • Recites parts of stories
  • Reads to dolls
  • Begins to combine words

23
Which Books to Choose
  • For 24-36-month-olds
  • Paper pages
  • Routine focused
  • (naptime, bedtime)
  • Rhyming words
  • Relevant to childs life
  • More advanced themes (big/small, on/under)

24
24-36 Months
  • Child
  • Turns paper pages
  • Protests when pages are skipped
  • Recites familiar parts of stories
  • May know 320 words
  • Requests same book repeatedly
  • Parent
  • Lets child control book
  • Points out letters and reads as part of routine
    (e.g., street signs)
  • Reads to assist with daily routines
  • Asks child to name objects
  • Relates books to childs experiences

25
Which Books to Choose
  • For 3-year-olds and above
  • Folk tales and legends
  • Alphabet and counting books
  • Exercise the childs imagination
  • Books can be chosen by child

26
3 Years and Older
  • Parent
  • Asks What happened?
  • Lets child tell story
  • Encourages writing
  • Points out letters and sounds
  • Responds/expands on childs questions
  • Child
  • Understands more complex stories
  • Anticipates outcomes
  • Attempts writing
  • Begins recognizing letters
  • Asks why questions
  • Attempts to use sentences and grammar

27
Summary of research on ROR
  • ROR significantly and positively influences the
    literacy environment of children
  • Parents read more to their children
  • Parents and children have more positive attitudes
    toward reading aloud
  • Children participating in ROR tend to have
    increased language development in comparison to
    non-participating children

28
Clinic-based Intervention to Promote Literacy
(Needlman et. al., 1991)
  • A pilot study designed to determine if exposure
    to a clinic-based literacy intervention promotes
    parents reading aloud to children
  • Conducted waiting room interviews with 79 parents
    regarding childrens literacy orientation
  • Results indicated that parents who received a
    book through ROR were 4 times more likely to
    report reading to children

29
Literacy Promotion in Primary Care
Pediatrics Can We Make a Difference? (High, 2000)
  • Evaluated the impact of a clinic-based literacy
    program, based on the ROR model, on parent-child
    book sharing
  • 205 low-income families
  • - 106 Intervention - 99 Control
  • Results indicated that intervention families read
    aloud more frequently to their children and had
    more positive attitudes toward reading

30
Frequency of Reading Aloud (High et. al., 2000)
31
Change in Parent-Child Book Sharing (High et.
al., 2000)
32
Attitudes Toward Reading (High et. al., 2000)
33
The Impact of a Clinic-Based Literacy
Intervention on Language Development in
Inner-City Preschool Children (Mendelsohn et.
al., 2001)
  • Examined the impact of an ROR program on
    childrens language development
  • 122 participants
  • - 49 Intervention - 73 Comparison
  • Parents receiving the intervention read to their
    children approximately one more day/week than
    those in the control group
  • Children participating in the intervention had
    higher receptive and expressive language scores

34
Childrens Expressive and Receptive Language
Competencies (Mendelsohn et. al., 2001)
35
Who Benefits from ROR
  • Medical providers use books as valuable
    assessment tools and build bonds with families
  • Parents are given essential information about
    reading aloud and suggestions for parent-child
    interactions
  • Children get all the early literacy benefits of
    reading aloud and have 10 books of their own by
    age 5
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