Examining teachers’ language in Head Start classrooms from a Systemic Linguistics Approach☆

Abstract This study examined teacher language use in Head Start classrooms (N = 43) from the perspective of the Systemic Linguistics Approach (SLA) to describe the nature of teacher support for children's acquisition of academic language and factors that shape language use. Using a sample of teachers who were part of a larger study on early language/literacy curricula, we hypothesized that evidence of emergent academic language registers might be identified using utterance-level descriptions of language and that language use would vary across the three settings examined: Book Reading, Group Content Instruction, and Small Group Instruction. Differences in overall patterns of language were also expected to relate to teachers’ pedagogical skill and the intervention condition to which they were exposed in the larger study. Language use within setting was expected to vary by the content of instruction and, in Book Reading, the books being read. These hypotheses were examined using a corpus of 146,000 teacher utterances from a study in Head Start pre-kindergarten classrooms that included a business-as-usual condition and two intervention conditions. Language variables included use of sophisticated vocabulary, diversity of words used, number of words used, and syntactic complexity; semantic content variables included talk about vocabulary, concepts, and skills. We found evidence of emergent academic registers in Book Reading, Group Content Instructional Time and Small Group Instruction; differences in teacher talk were associated primarily with setting, and few differences related to teacher pedagogical skill or intervention condition. Language use during Book Reading was affected by the type of book read. Our findings identify factors that should be considered when planning interventions and studying classroom language.

[1]  Marina Vasilyeva,et al.  The Relation between Teacher Input and Lexical Growth of Preschoolers. , 2011 .

[2]  Andrew J. Mashburn,et al.  Quality of Language and Literacy Instruction in Preschool Classrooms Serving At-Risk Pupils. , 2008, Early childhood research quarterly.

[3]  Mary J. Schleppegrell Academic Language in Teaching and Learning , 2012, The Elementary School Journal.

[4]  David K. Dickinson,et al.  Patterns of Teacher–Child Conversations in Head Start Classrooms: Implications for an Empirically Grounded Approach to Professional Development , 2008 .

[5]  Monique Sénéchal,et al.  A book reading intervention with preschool children who have limited vocabularies: the benefits of regular reading and dialogic reading , 2000 .

[6]  David K. Dickinson,et al.  Preschool talk: Patterns of teacher-child interaction in early childhood classrooms. , 1991 .

[7]  Janellen Huttenlocher,et al.  Preschool children's mathematical knowledge: The effect of teacher "math talk.". , 2006, Developmental psychology.

[8]  Barbara A. Wasik,et al.  The Effects of a Language and Literacy Intervention on Head Start Children and Teachers , 2006 .

[9]  Andrew J. Mashburn,et al.  Threshold analysis of association between child care quality and child outcomes for low-income children in pre-kindergarten programs , 2010 .

[10]  Richard M. Clifford,et al.  Early Childhood Environment Rating Scale, Revised Edition , 1998 .

[11]  Froma P. Roth,et al.  Unresolved Mysteries , 1996 .

[12]  Susan H. Landry,et al.  An evaluation of curriculum, setting, and mentoring on the performance of children enrolled in pre-kindergarten , 2007 .

[13]  Scott D. Gest,et al.  Promoting academic and social-emotional school readiness: the head start REDI program. , 2008, Child development.

[14]  E. Hoff The specificity of environmental influence: socioeconomic status affects early vocabulary development via maternal speech. , 2003, Child development.

[15]  J. Gee Social Linguistics And Literacies: Ideology in Discourse , 1996 .

[16]  Mary J. Schleppegrell Linguistic Features of the Language of Schooling , 2001 .

[17]  Julie S. Lynch,et al.  Predicting Reading Comprehension in Early Elementary School: The Independent Contributions of Oral Language and Decoding Skills , 2009 .

[18]  J. Huttenlocher,et al.  Effects of language intervention on syntactic skill levels in preschoolers. , 2006, Developmental psychology.

[19]  A. Biemiller,et al.  An effective method for building meaning vocabulary in primary grades , 2006 .

[20]  Catherine E. Snow,et al.  The Challenge of Academic Language , 2009 .

[21]  Shayne B. Piasta,et al.  Impact of professional development on preschool teachers’ conversational responsivity and children's linguistic productivity and complexity , 2012 .

[22]  David N. Rapp,et al.  Simple but complex: components of the simple view of reading across grade levels , 2009 .

[23]  David K. Dickinson Teachers’ Language Practices and Academic Outcomes of Preschool Children , 2011, Science.

[24]  Jeannette Mancilla-Martinez Word Meanings Matter: Cultivating English Vocabulary Knowledge in Fifth‐Grade Spanish‐Speaking Language Minority Learners , 2010 .

[25]  Michael J. Kieffer,et al.  The Effectiveness and Ease of Implementation of an Academic Vocabulary Intervention for Linguistically Diverse Students in Urban Middle Schools , 2010 .

[26]  Shayne B. Piasta,et al.  Increasing young children's contact with print during shared reading: longitudinal effects on literacy achievement. , 2012, Child development.

[27]  David K. Dickinson,et al.  Long-Term Effects of Preschool Teachers' Book Readings on Low-Income Children's Vocabulary and Story Comprehension. , 1994 .

[28]  Matthew J. Koehler,et al.  Effects of an early literacy professional development intervention on head start teachers and children. , 2010 .

[29]  S. Heath Ways with Words: Language, Life and Work in Communities and Classrooms , 1983 .

[30]  Shayne B. Piasta,et al.  The impact of teacher responsivity education on preschoolers' language and literacy skills. , 2011, American journal of speech-language pathology.

[31]  B. MacWhinney The CHILDES project: tools for analyzing talk , 1992 .

[32]  E. Elbers,et al.  The Relation of Home Language and Literacy to Three-Year-Old Children's Emergent Academic Language in Narrative and Instruction Genres , 2012, The Elementary School Journal.

[33]  Sarah Michaels,et al.  “Sharing time”: Children's narrative styles and differential access to literacy , 1981, Language in Society.

[34]  L. Girolametto,et al.  Facilitating emergent literacy: efficacy of a model that partners speech-language pathologists and educators. , 2012, American journal of speech-language pathology.

[35]  Douglas R. Powell,et al.  Teacher Education, Book-Reading Practices, and Children's Language Growth Across One Year of Head Start , 2009 .

[36]  Robert C. Pianta,et al.  La & Classroom assessment scoring system (CLASS) manual: Pre-K. Baltimore: Brookes Publishing Co. , 2008 .

[37]  C. Snow,et al.  Academic Language and the Challenge of Reading for Learning About Science , 2010, Science.

[38]  Frank R. Vellutino,et al.  Components of Reading Ability: Multivariate Evidence for a Convergent Skills Model of Reading Development , 2007 .

[39]  A. Kaiser,et al.  The effectiveness of parent-implemented language interventions: a meta-analysis. , 2011, American journal of speech-language pathology.

[40]  Liliana Tolchinsky,et al.  Developing linguistic literacy: a comprehensive model , 2002, Journal of Child Language.

[41]  S. Kontos,et al.  An Eco-Behavioral Analysis of Children's Engagement in Urban Public School Preschool Classrooms. , 2008 .

[42]  David K. Dickinson,et al.  Beginning Literacy with Language: Young Children Learning at Home and School. , 2001 .

[43]  E. Hoff How social contexts support and shape language development , 2006 .

[44]  L. Justice,et al.  Educators' Use of Cognitively Challenging Questions in Economically Disadvantaged Preschool Classroom Contexts , 2008 .

[45]  Esther L. Larocco,et al.  Language in a Changing World , 1996 .

[46]  G. Duncan,et al.  Kindergarten skills and fifth-grade achievement: Evidence from the ECLS-K , 2009 .

[47]  William E. Nagy,et al.  Words as Tools: Learning Academic Vocabulary as Language Acquisition , 2012 .

[48]  P. Leseman,et al.  Home literacy as a special language environment to prepare children for school , 2007 .

[49]  Hossein Nassaji The Relationship between Depth of Vocabulary Knowledge and L2 Learners' Lexical Inferencing Strategy Use and Success , 2004 .

[50]  C. Snow,et al.  Lexical input as related to children's vocabulary acquisition: effects of sophisticated exposure and support for meaning. , 2001, Developmental psychology.

[51]  David Malvern,et al.  Developmental trends in lexical diversity , 2004 .

[52]  Penelope Collins,et al.  Evidence for the Importance of Academic Word Knowledge for the Academic Achievement of Diverse Middle School Students , 2012, The Elementary School Journal.

[53]  G. Whitehurst,et al.  Oral language and code-related precursors to reading: evidence from a longitudinal structural model. , 2002, Developmental psychology.

[54]  David K. Dickinson,et al.  The Comprehensive Language Approach to Early Literacy: The Interrelationships Among Vocabulary, Phonological Sensitivity, and Print Knowledge Among Preschool-Aged Children , 2003 .

[55]  Gene Ouellette,et al.  A not-so-simple view of reading: how oral vocabulary and visual-word recognition complicate the story , 2010 .

[56]  D. Share,et al.  Language Impairment at School Entry and Later Reading Disability: Connections at Lexical Versus Supralexical Levels of Reading , 2004 .

[57]  F. Morrison,et al.  Preschool instruction and children's emergent literacy growth , 2006 .

[58]  Catherine E. Snow,et al.  Language proficiency, home-language status, and English vocabulary development: A longitudinal follow-up of the Word Generation program* , 2012, Bilingualism: Language and Cognition.

[59]  R. Pianta,et al.  Development of Academic Skills from Preschool Through Second Grade: Family and Classroom Predictors of Developmental Trajectories , 2002 .

[60]  David K. Dickinson,et al.  Relation between language experiences in preschool classrooms and children's kindergarten and fourth-grade language and reading abilities. , 2011, Child development.

[61]  W. Elley Vocabulary acquisition from listening to stories. , 1989 .

[62]  Susan H. Landry,et al.  An experimental study evaluating professional development activities within a state funded pre-kindergarten program , 2011 .

[63]  L. Justice,et al.  Preschoolers' Exposure to Language Stimulation in Classrooms Serving At-Risk Children: The Contribution of Group Size and Activity Context , 2009 .

[64]  J. Huttenlocher,et al.  Language input and child syntax , 2002, Cognitive Psychology.

[65]  Susan H. Landry,et al.  Effectiveness of Comprehensive Professional Development for Teachers of At-Risk Preschoolers , 2009 .

[66]  D. P. Hayes,et al.  Vocabulary simplification for children: a special case of ‘motherese’? , 1988, Journal of Child Language.

[67]  Ezra Jack Keats Whistle for Willie , 1964 .

[68]  J. Chall,et al.  Readability revisited : the new Dale-Chall readability formula , 1995 .