Typical Language Accomplishments for Children
Typical
Language Accomplishments for Children, Birth to Age 6
Source: U.S. Department
of Education
Learning to read is built on a
foundation of language skills that children start to learn at birth—a process
that is both complicated and amazing. Most children develop certain skills as they
move through the early stages of learning language. By age 7, most children are
reading.
The following list of
accomplishments is based on current scientific research in the fields of
reading, early childhood education, and child development [
***
] . Studies continue in their fields, and there is
still much still to learn. As you look over the accomplishments, keep in mind
that children vary a great deal in how they develop and learn. If you have
questions or concerns about your child's progress, talk with the child's
doctor, teacher, or a speech and language therapist. For children with any kind
of disability or learning problem, the sooner they can get the special help
they need, the easier it will be for them to learn.
From
birth to age 3, most babies and toddlers become able to:
- Make sounds that imitate the tones and rhythms that
adults use when talking.
- Respond to gestures and facial expressions.
- Begin to associate words they hear frequently with what
the words mean.
- Make cooing, babbling sounds in the crib, which gives
way to enjoying rhyming and nonsense word games with a parent or
caregiver.
- Play along in games such as "peek-a-boo" and
"pat-a-cake."
- Handle objects such as board books and alphabet blocks
in their play.
- Recognize certain books by their covers.
- Pretend to read books.
- Understand how books should be handled.
- Share books with an adult as a routine part of life.
- Name some objects in a book.
- Talk about characters in books.
- Look at pictures in books and realize they are symbols
of real things.
- Listen to stories.
- Ask or demand that adults read or write with them.
- Begin to pay attention to specific print such as the
first letters of their names.
- Scribble with a purpose (trying to write or draw
something).
- Produce some letter-like forms and scribbles that
resemble, in some way, writing.
From
ages 3-4, most preschoolers become able to:
- Enjoy listening to and talking about storybooks.
- Understand that print carries a message.
- Make attempts to read and write.
- Identify familiar signs and labels.
- Participate in rhyming games.
- Identify some letters and make some letter-sound
matches.
- Use known letters (or their best attempt to write the
letters) to represent written language especially for meaningful words
like their names or phrases such as "I love you."
At
age 5, most kindergartners become able to:
- Sound as if they are reading when they pretend to read.
- Enjoy being read to.
- Retell simple stories.
- Use descriptive language to explain or to ask
questions.
- Recognize letters and letter-sound matches.
- Show familiarity with rhyming and beginning sounds.
- Understand that print is read left-to-right and
top-to-bottom.
- Begin to match spoken words with written ones.
- Begin to write letters of the alphabet and some words
they use and hear often.
- Begin to write stories with some readable parts.
At
age 6, most first-graders can:
- Read and retell familiar stories.
- Use a variety of ways to help with reading a story such
as rereading, predicting what will happen, asking questions, or using
visual cues or pictures.
- Decide on their own to use reading and writing for
different purposes;
- Read some things aloud with ease.
- Identify new words by using letter-sound matches, parts
of words and their understanding of the rest of a story or printed item.
- Identify an increasing number of words by sight.
- Sound out and represent major sounds in a word when
trying to spell.
- Write about topics that mean a lot to them.
- Try to use some punctuation marks and capitalization.
***Based on information from Preventing Reading
Difficulties in Young Children, a report of the National Research
Council, by the Committee on the Prevention of Reading Difficulties in Young
Children, 1998; and from the Joint Position Statement of the
International Reading Association (IRA) and the National
Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), 1998.
Publication Release: July 26, 2007
