The Language Experience Approach Readings

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Readings THE LANGUAGE EXPERIENCE APPROACH Introduction: Experience is the best teacher. For almost a century now, educators have used personal experience as the basis for learning and literacy instruction. The Language Experience Approach (LEA) draws upon and takes advantage of this important link between experience and education by using student narratives as the basis for reading instruction. The Language Experience Approach (LEA) LEA is an approach based on the use of students’ own spoken words as the reading text. The teacher records what student says and helps them to read the written version of their own speech. The generated text can be used for word study, discussion, grammar and syntax practice and prompts for student writing. The major purpose of this approach is to impart the understanding that anything that can be said can be written, and anything that can be written can be read or said. Any event or experience that creates a lot of interest capture children’s imagination is a good focus. This is an approach which views reading as an extension of speaking. It combines reading with other communication skills such as listening, oral expression and writing. The approach uses a learner’s own language patterns, vocabulary and experiences to supply both meaningful and highly motivational reading materials. The child uses language skills to make an orderly transition from speaking to writing to reading. Language experience activities do not separate reading from the other communication skills. More than any approach to reading, there is a developmental integration of the communication skills of listening, speaking, reading and writing. From the very first the child is encouraged to express his thoughts, ideas and feelings. This approach to reading allows teachers to integrate and develop skills in all facets of language experiences simultaneously and with equal emphasis instead of giving undue attention to any specific language skill. Kenneth Goodman and advocates of more current approaches to language instructions also believe that “the four skills” are interrelated and mutually beneficial components of the “whole language” and thus should be taught simultaneously. Whole language proponents argue that reading should be taught along with speaking, writing, and grammatical skills. Therefore reading becomes a part of a communication cycle like this.

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Reading

Thinking Experiencing

ing

Writing

Talking

Philosophy of the Approach The title “language experience” provides a clue to the nature of the approach. All the communication skills, listening, speaking, reading and writing included in this language-arts-oriented approach. The philosophy of the approach is best described by Lee and Allens (1963) rationale. 1. What a child thinks she can talk about. 2. What one talks about can be expressed in writing. 3. Anything a child or teacher writes can be read. 4. What a child has to say is as important to her as what other people have written for her to say. The language experience approach thus emphasizes that the child’s own ideas are worth expressing. They are not only worth saying, they are also worth writing down and being read by the child, the teacher, and other classmates. This approach stresses the natural flow of language. First, the child’s oral expression is stimulated by art, literature or other experiences., and then her written expression is developed from her oral expression, her motivation for reading her own language, she is moved naturally into reading the language or other authors found in published books. The Learning Experience Process The language experience stimulates the oral language and writing by providing opportunities for discussion, exploration of ideas and expression of feelings. The language experiences in turn provide the content for group and individual stories composed by children and recorded by the teacher. Teachers introduce students to the language experience approach through development of a group chart story. The chart story is usually written by an entire group, guided by the teacher, following a shared motivational experience. The motivational experience maybe any activity that involves the group and encourages oral language as the children are drawn into a discussion about the activity. Examples of other motivational materials and activities include trips, films, building projects, pictures, guest speakers, science experiments of activities will provide many motivational experiences for the chart story. After a motivational experience and the oral discussion, the teacher records the story exactly as it is said by each child. For L I students Jones (1986) warns, “the syntax (should be) preserved exactly as it was spoken” in order to prevent “affronting the students with the suggestion that his/her language needs

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to be changed” and “assure the strongest possible connection with the student’s spoken language” (29-30) The teacher may record the story on a large piece of newsprint, a poster board chart, or on the chalkboard, from which it will later be reprinted onto a chart. Which ever means of recording is used, it is essential that children sit so they can see each word as it is written in the proper left-to-right sequence. They will thus see that sentences follow a progressive pattern from the top of the page to the bottom and those sentences begin with capital letters and end with periods. As the children dictate the story, the teacher writes each word, repeating the word aloud as he writes. Following each sentence, the teacher reads the whole sentence to the group, using his hand to underline the word being read. The teacher asks the child who has indicated the sentence whether the sentence is correct. Five Step Basic Procedure in LEA Each language experience activity is developed in a specific sequence of experiences. “Experience “is a key term in this approach. Children are stimulated by experiencing a motivational activity. This activity provides them with something to think about, talk about, and read about. The resulting experience story is meaningful because the children have experienced the story before they are expected to either write, read, to answer questions about it. The following sequence is common for the language experience activities. 1. Motivational activity. Provide an experience to stimulate thinking discussion, writing and reading. Motivational ideas include field trips, pictures, experiments, holidays, poetry, music, tall tales, local issues, comparisons, families, pets, friends, myself, puppetry, make believe, birthday parties, content area units, art work, biographies, guest speakers, movies, literature, dreams, making recipe, classroom animals, hobbies, or the weather. The general procedure for language experience approach involves the whole class or a small group in:  experiencing  discussing the experience  recording the experience  using the record of the experience for reading and writing activities. 2. Discussion time. Provide a discussion time so children can think, exchange, expand, and clarify ideas before they write. 3. Dictation or individual writing. The student dictates an account or story to the teacher, who records the statements to construct the basic reading material. If the story is dictated, either by a group or an individual child, record the words as presented by the group or child. Place the children in a position so they can watch as you write on the chalkboard, chart, or large sheet of newsprint. If the

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language experience is being written individually by each child, provide as much assistance as necessary for them to write their own thoughts. 4. Read the story. Read the story back to the students immediately. Trace each word with your hand and allow the students to verify that this is exactly what they said. Allow them to read the story with you and by themselves, when they feel ready. Reading is made easier by the fact that the student is reading material that is selfgenerated. 5. Reinforcement. Use appropriate reinforcement activities with the language experience story. For example, cut apart sentences in a sequentially –ordered story, mix them, and have students put them back into the correct order. Match the sentences that are cut apart with the sentences in a chart story. Match phrases or words within the chart story that begin with a specific consonant or rhyme with a specific word. Introduce a role playing activity about a problem developed or resolved in a experience story. Here individual story words are learned and other reading skills are reinforced through Teacher-designed activities related to the story. Theoretical Support As Jones (1986) notes, the basic approach to LEA as outlined in the five-step process above draws on several key language learning principles. 1. Learning occurs from the known to the unknown. The learner begins with his or her own spoken language. 2. Learning occurs most effectively in a general to specific direction. In reading, students must be immersed in a meaningful context of written language for learning to be most effective. 3. Struggling adult readers usually have a low self-concept as readers and need to be assured of some immediate success. There is little to lose and much to gain with the LEA and assisted readings. 4. Adult learners are often very time conscious and need to leave each lesson with a feeling of accomplishment. Everyone reads a t every LEA session. LANGUAGE EXPERIENCE GUIDING PRINCIPLES Oral language and personal experience bridge the gap between spoken and written language. 

Language experience exploits the two major resources children possess – their language and experience. It is one of the most efficient ways to initiate reading and writing. Words describing personal experiences provide a context of maximum support; someone else may not. When children’s language and experience are accepted as a starting point for literacy, learning to read and write is easy.

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Literacy instruction is organized around the personal experiences of the learner. Personal experiences when connected to personal language, is much more easily remembered and understood than someone else’s language and experience. Language experience makes learning to read and write accessible for nearly any child - and adult for that matter.

The language arts must be integrated. Integrated language arts create a corridor for mutual listening and talking. Speaking and listening are present in nearly every aspect of the language experience approach. Book talks, sharing writing, responding to literature, comprehension discussions, dictating accounts, and peer discussions lead to an abundance of opportunities to talk and listen to situations directly connected with reading and writing. Research supports writers’ intuitive understanding that reading influences writing (Tierney and Shanahan, 1991) Language is for making meaning and is best acquired through meaningful use and practice. Acquiring language, in all of its subtleties, is the special province of childhood. As children acquire language, they acquire more than a set of words and sentences. They also acquire thought structures and learning strategies that aid learning to read and write. As children develop, language becomes instrumental in directing thinking and learning. The richer language becomes, the more bountiful thinking and learning can be. The language experience approach involves children in their own language learning, acknowledges the worth of their language, and organizes the curriculum around their experiences. Children probe language to acquire its meaning. No one does this better than a young child. Writing knowledge is acquired most easily in company with the acquisition of reading. Writing is a fundamental component of language experience, and a dictation is a forerunner of independent writing. Dictation is oral composition, and oral compositions are the language experience child’s first reader. The step beyond oral composition is independent writing. But independent writing has requirements that young children are only partly prepared to emulate. For instance they have only rudimentary knowledge of spelling. Invented spelling, therefore, must be encouraged because it enables children to write early. Recording dictated accounts gives children a model o how written language is produced by observing the teacher recording their accounts. As teachers record speech, they can talk about writing and model writing as they talk.

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Literature models and motivates language arts instructions. Where literature is a priority, books must be available. Therefore, classroom and libraries are essential. Through books, children may meet any person, visit any place, and live in any era. Reading books enhances children’s ability to function well in a literature society. Literature models the kinds of writing we want children to produce – expository, narrative, and poetic. Literature helps children think about what writers do and how they do it. Literature offers meanings in many levels, and enriches lives in many ways. As literacy grows children read and write their own books, talk about what they have learned, and create art related to the literature they have ingested. A sight vocabulary is derived from dictated accounts to support growth in word recognition. Word recognition is a means to an end – comprehension. Until a child can read written words fluently, meaning cannot be reliably derived from text. An initial sight vocabulary is necessary so that word recognition can be taught from known words. Language experience is an efficient way to establish a sight vocabulary. After reading their dictated accounts, students make word cards, choosing only those words they recognize both in and out of context. Word study activities begin once a child has acquired a few sight words. Practice of language experience. Language experience is not limited to dictation. There are other instructional components that are part and parcel of the language experience approach. They include dictation, comprehension, writing, literature-based individualized reading, word recognition, talking and listening, art and drama, sharing and publishing, and the mechanics of literacy – spelling, handwriting, and punctuation. Dictation: There are three phases to dictation: recording the account, rereading the account, and drawing words from accounts for word study. The language experience approach introduces children to reading through dictated accounts. These dictated accounts are the initial source of reading material. Dictation may be taken from groups or individuals. Groups typically have seven to nine children. Group dictation accustoms children to talking about their experiences, and it helps them understand the procedures to rereading dictated accounts. Individually dictated accounts can be started when children are comfortable talking about their experiences and are familiar with rereading procedures. Dictation can be gradually phased out as children become fluent readers. Those who are progressing more slowly continue until they, too, can read fluently. Some

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children are less eager to dictate than others, some need the stimulus of a recent class experience; a book read aloud, a nature walk, a discussion of pets. After a time, children come to class to discuss their personal experiences and have less need for a specific classroom stimulus. Comprehension: Comprehension is a crucial goal of reading instruction. Any approach to language arts that does not include a strong comprehension component has an intolerable weakness. Comprehension instruction must be deliberate, intensive, and direct. It cannot be left to chance or limited to shallow questioning during or after reading. Comprehension instructions must be planned and organized. Comprehension strategies can be used with fiction and nonfiction materials. Instruction can occur in small groups and whole class settings. Writing: Writing is a fundamental component of language experience. It is an indispensable companion of reading instruction. Schedule writing sessions for not less than 35 minutes to 40 minutes every day starting on the first day of school. Those who can not write can draw and have their drawings labeled by the teacher. Writing process and writing workshop are essential in order to develop a strong writing component. Children need support in their writing, consequently, it is necessary to use invented spelling, which enables children to use the full range of their oral vocabulary. Writing is valuable in itself, but it also contributes to comprehension, word recognition, and spelling. Writing also gives multiple opportunities for developing speaking and listening skills. Literature-based individualized reading: Individualized reading relies on children self-selecting books as the primary reading material. Children read at their own pace and keep a record of the books they have read. Individual and group conferences are help to discuss books and monitor comprehension. When not otherwise engaged, children read books, write about books, or work on projects related in the books they have read. Periods of time are set aside to share experiences and projects related to the books children read. Activities, such as drama and read-alouds, are organized at the teacher’s discretion. A good way to introduce books to children is to read all or part of them aloud. Reading materials include short stories, essays, reports, books, magazines, and newspapers – any material that children find interesting. Since multiple copies of reading materials may be needed, literature based basal readers provide a convenient source of useful reading materials. Word Recognition: -

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Spend 20 to 25 minutes a day on word recognition activities and continue until word recognition fluency is achieved. Sight words learned through language experience accounts, are a starting point. Auditory and visual discrimination can be taught, using the text of dictated accounts and words drawn from these accounts. Word study activities are especially valuable. Show children how to categorize words by meaning, sound, structural pattern, and other word features. After a sufficient number of words have accumulated in word banks, children can work in groups or individually to construct and exchange short messages using their word banks. Talking and listening: Oral and written language are parallel systems for communicating meaning. Talking and listening sometimes get short shift in language arts curriculum since reading and writing tend to dominate class activities. It is much better when oral and written language work together to create literacy events. Art and drama projects are excellent vehicles for connecting reading and writing with speaking, listening, and viewing. Language experience and whole language have an advantage that their approach to reading and writing affords multiple opportunities to integrate listening and talking with reading and writing. Art, drama and music: Before children are capable of recording their ideas through the more abstract medium of print, they are able to represent their impressions of the world in the concrete forms of art, drama, and music. Artistic expression allows children to use their senses and this, in turn, adds substance to experience. Writing, reading, talking, listening, viewing, and thinking are enhanced when children express themselves with paint, fabric, clay, drama, and dance. Sharing and Publishing: Encourage publication and oral sharing of writing. Sharing and publishing experiences are an essential component of the language experiences approach. Book talks, book making, and the author’s chair are forums for sharing language arts experiences, though they can easily degenerate into routines devoid of vitality and interest if not monitored closely. Book talks and author’s chair stimulate critical listening when the form is varied and fresh. It I becomes too reutilized, children lose interest. Mechanics; spelling, handwriting, and punctuation: Children need to experience the writing process so they can draft, revise and edit their writing, and in the final stages, proofread for miscues. They also

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need systematic spelling instruction beginning in first or second grade and continuing until a high level of spelling proficiency is acquired. Legibility is the key issue in handwriting. It takes time for children to acquire that eye-hand coordination need to write legibly. Whether teachers choose to use handwriting materials or teach handwriting on their own, it does not harm and much good to show children how to form letters and space them so that their audience can read them. Punctuation becomes increasingly important as children more from early to later stages of writing. Dictation provides opportunities to informally talk about the symbols we call punctuation. Casual comments about punctuation can be made now and then as an account is recorded. Teach punctuation in mini-lessons, as well, aiming at needs observed from analyzing children’s writing. The Language Experience Approach recognizes that:  Experience and language interact all the time as a normal part of our lives.  Most children bring to school and ability to use oral language, it is this language that the teacher start with and proceeds from;  Errors in the use of language (i.e. not using Standard English) need to be overcome by allowing more practice in talking, listening, writing and reading  Correcting and giving advice is related to the need of children to express themselves effectively using real communication in a non-threatening climate. The Language Experience Approach:  Can create situations in which talking, listening, writing and reading have purpose, relevance and meaning across all areas of the curriculum. 

Is based on the concept that reading has the most meaning for children when the materials being read are centered on their experiences and expressed in their language. It integrates the teaching of reading with all other learning areas as children listen, talk and write about personal experiences and ideas.



Is part language development. Success depends on continued language growth so that as children acquire greater facility with language, they are able to make full use of it as an agent foe wider reading and learning. Exposure to many diverse situations that involve listening, discussing, exploring, reading and writing provides children with greater understanding of language that will assist in interpreting print and expressing thought and feelings.

In the early stages, children’s personal feelings, thoughts, ideas about and reactions to experiences provide the major source of material for the teacher to record fore reading. As children’s abilities with writing develop, much of this 9

recording is done by the children in various forms either personally, in groups or as a class. It provides a source of readily-accessible reading material. LEA is especially effective approach for beginning readers because:  Writing down students’ thoughts demonstrates that we think their ideas, language, and experience are important.  Transforming students’ spoken language into printing on a page helps the new reader begin to understand the relationship between oral language and written text.  The reading text produced is familiar and meaningful to the students. This familiarity helps new readers comprehend what they are reading.  Figuring out the words is easier because the readers know, in general, what words are in the passage. The predictability of what specific word comes next is high because we are using the student’s own language.  Having familiar text enhances comprehension and decreases demands on readers’ attention. Thinking can be focused on figuring out the words without losing the meaning of what is being read. Conclusion: Although there is no one “super method” for language teaching, LEA offers a useful method for beginning literacy instruction by linking the students’ language and experience learning. References: Adrian J. Wurr Language Experience Approach Revisited: The Use of Personal Narratives in Adult L2 Literacy Instruction, The Reading Matrix Vol2, no.1, April 2002 Non-Formal Training Program, PRODED-ERP, DAP 1988 Handouts Ronald R. Cramer, Ph.D. - Principles and Practices of Language Experience, Scott Foreman Publishing Helen Hoffner – An Adapted Language Experience Approach: Helping Secondary Students with Content Area Reading

Prepared by: Perla H. Cuanzon DepEd, Manila

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