How do essential early school skills, such as reading, writing, and basic maths develop?
What do I need to know?
- Reading, writing and maths are the most important skills that children learn at school, but the foundations for these skills develop long before the child starts school. These skills are complex and they involve lots of different brain areas.
- The brain develops rapidly during the first few years of life: more than one million new connections between brain cells are formed every second.
- The brain circuits that are involved in the basic skills of vision, hearing and language develop first, and they are critical for the later-developing brain circuits involved in reading, writing and maths.
- A child’s genes are important for brain development, but so are their environment and their experiences. Interactions with adults and other children who are responsive to the child’s attempts to communicate and to learn about the world around them are particularly important for building brain circuits.
- Spoken language is a particularly important foundation for reading, writing and maths. Some children will be exposed to more than one language and will be growing up bilingual, or even multilingual. Some may even be acquiring a signed language. For the brain, the type of language (spoken or signed) and the number of different languages is not important – what is important is that the child grows up with lots of opportunities to experience language and to take part in conversations.
- Reading requires the child to be able to recognise words written on the page and to be able to understand the meaning of those words in the context of the surrounding text. Children who see lots written language in their environment, are read to often by caregivers, and develop a good vocabulary, will have a strong foundation for learning to read when they start school.
- Similarly, writing builds on children’s language skills, but also their fine motor skills. Children who have lots of opportunities to use pencils, crayons and paints, and to play with puzzles and small-scale construction materials, will develop their fine motor skills and have a strong foundation for learning to write.
- Maths builds on children’s hands-on experiences with quantities and shapes and on their experiences with mathematical language – such as the words used for counting (‘one’, ‘two’ ‘three’ etc.) and phrases like ‘how many altogether’, ‘which is the biggest’, and ‘not the same’.
What can I do in my classroom?
- Children vary greatly in their pace of development. It is important to recognise that children will start school having had a range of different experiences and that they will be at different levels of development.
- Children learn best when they are in active, engaged, constructive and interactive classrooms, when what they have to learn is meaningful to them, and when they receive feedback and questions.
- Children learn best when the literacy and maths curriculum is presented in a systematic way (i.e., in a deliberate planned sequence where each new piece of knowledge and each new skill builds on what has been learnt before). Children need lots of opportunities to practice their emerging literacy and maths skills.
- It is important to involve parents in their children’s learning, and to support parents in creating rich opportunities for learning in the home. Activities such as helping with household chores like shopping and cooking help develop literacy and maths skills. If parents are not confident in using English at home, then reassure them that their home language is a resource, not a handicap: encourage them to use their home language to converse with their child, read stories, sing songs, etc.
What should I be wary of?
It can be tempting to think that, because the early years are so critical for a child’s development, early-emerging gaps between low- and high-performing children are difficult to close. From a neuroscientific point of view, however, the brain continues to grow in the primary school years, and in adolescence too. As the neuroscientist Jay Giedd says, “Even though the first 3 years are important, so are the next 16.“ https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/teenbrain/interviews/giedd.html
Where can I find out more?
- This video from the Science of Early Childhood Development from the Harvard Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University explains the importance for brain development of early interactions with responsive adults: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WO-CB2nsqTA.
- This series of videos from the University of Oregon’s Changing Brains DVD covers early maths development: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZVGCkDdFTY language development: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMOHtSkSPfA and reading: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jprh_JvXUUc
- Find out about the potential benefits of guided play during the early years in this interview with Deena Weisberg on the BOLD blog.
Topic 3: Early Development
Topic 3: Early Development Questions
-
Is there any evidence related to learning in science museums? Any good advice how to make the visit more effective (2 Comments)
-
Do you have a set of data for learning curve? We do the finger maze activity with students but wondered if you have
-
We have become increasingly a visual society and multimedia learning promotes a combination of textual and visual
-
How can we help pupils with exam stress? How can we help them remember Science equations etc? (1 Comment)
-
My friend is about to move to an international school in South Korea who this year are employing a ‘positive psychology (1 Comment)
-
I have twins (boy and girl) in year 8. They have the same family life but very different personalities. They are doing
-
Has mental health of pupils got worse, or is more reported? (1 Comment)
-
The ‘redundancy effect’ says that it is bad to read out the text of PowerPoint slides but the ‘modality effect’ says (2 Comments)
-
Are there any edtech tools (online and physical) you could recommend for the classroom which promote growth mindset (1 Comment)
-
I am interested in meta -cognition – what is the earliest age that children are really aware of their own learning (1 Comment)
-
What is the science of dealing with student behaviour for stealing? Do in school suspensions have positive outcomes?
-
How can I help my daughter love science? and be motivated to study it? (2 Comments)
-
I had a conversation with a teacher friend today, and she said that among her friends more than 50% have a child that’s (2 Comments)
-
I was just preparing a lesson, and deciding which exemplar of GCSE work to share with the students *first*. (The goal (2 Comments)
-
I am an English teacher in secondary school and I’m concerned that we are not picking up conditions such as dyslexia (1 Comment)
-
I just read an article (https://goo.gl/JrK5yY) that says neurons do not grow past early adolescence. It does say that (4 Comments)
-
Is there a relation between the unimodal (in association cortices) and multimodal (in Hippocampal Pyramidal neurons)
-
The idea of an individual having a specific learning style has been discredited – but is mixing styles/approaches in a lesson also discredited? (1 Comment)
-
Some reading I’m doing indicates that information is not saved to long term memory with out revisiting while other
-
Individual differences – in the book ‘Battle Hymn of the Tiger Teachers’, the staff describe a situation where they (3 Comments)
-
I am interested in the factors which affect the development of comprehension skills. Do you think poor comprehension (5 Comments)
-
“certainly thematic learning and providing context for content can really help students learn.” (Question answer by
-
Is there any evidence, specifically in educational settings, to say that a strong school culture (i.e. teachers all
-
I am interested in which early childhood assessments (3-4 year olds) best predict academic success and give reliable (3 Comments)
-
Remembering that Hattie said only an effect size of 0.4 or greater was worth considering (as almost every initiative in (4 Comments)