Is it the environment or the genetic makeup that defines a
child’s achievement level?
The environment may play a larger role in regard to student
achievement than anticipated. According
to Shenk (2010) genetic factors do exist and they interact with environmental
factors, but genetic factors are not straitjackets that hold us in
place. We are beginning to understand
the significance of early exposure to literacy.
Hart and Risley (1995) found some children heard thirty million more
words than other children by age four. They
followed forty-two families for more than three years and took samples of the
number of words spoken in their homes.
These families represented three income brackets: welfare, working
class, and professional. According to
Shenk, “Children in professionals’ homes were exposed to an average of more
than fifteen hundred more spoken words per hour than children in welfare homes”
(2010). Children who heard more words were better prepared for school than
others. These same children were
followed into the third grade and researchers found that they had larger
vocabularies, were stronger readers, and achieved higher. This indicates that the achievement gap can
remain even after formal schooling. This
research further supports the importance of early literacy for kids.
Shenk recommends the following triggers that influence
student achievement: speak to children early and often, read early and often,
nurture and encourage, set high expectations, embrace failure, and encourage a
growth mindset. One of the initiatives
of the Thirty Million Words Project is early intervention. In Chicago, they are beginning at birth. The project is emphasizing more parent-child
talk beginning as soon as the child is born.
Some think that reading to an infant is a waste of time because they
cannot understand. It is not about them
understanding it is more about the exposure to many different words over time.
Early literacy is the key to future academic success. The best thing we can do is read to our
children every night. As someone who has
four children under the age of seven I know that this is difficult at
times. Try to make a commitment to
reading at least 15-30 minutes a night to your children and remember it is
never too early to start.
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