[PovertyRaceWomen 1432] Re: Improving Family LiteracyAndre Whitmore andrewhitmore at yahoo.comSat Nov 24 12:54:28 EST 2007
Tom, Great article and I commend you on your insight. Your approach could slso spawn a retraining in sexual perspectives because most people do not consciously associate their sexual behaviors with childbirth or parenting. This type of family literacy could include an installment on devleoping conscious sexual behaviors that focus on childbirht, parenting, and family literacy. This could catch on in a big way. Andre ----- Original Message ---- From: "tsticht at znet.com" <tsticht at znet.com> To: povertyracewomen at nifl.gov Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2007 2:31:41 PM Subject: [PovertyRaceWomen 1414] Improving Family Literacy November 13, 2007 Needed: A "Before You Start Families" Program: A Multiple Life Cycles Approach to Improving Family Literacy Tom Sticht International Consultant in Adult Education In 1983, Denny Taylor published her book with the term "Family Literacy" in its title. To my knowledge, that is the first time the term was used in a published publication. Taylor was interested in ways in which children and their parents interacted that lead to the development of the children's literacy. This was mostly about literacy practices that took place within the family such as parents telling children the words in environmental print, or reading books to children, etc. Taylor's research was not concerned with what adults did to improve their own literacy, though some of their activities with their children may, in fact, have helped the adults develop better literacy abilities. Now, almost a quarter century after Taylor's influential book, Barton & Coley (2007) have once again focussed on the family and its influence on children's literacy development. In the preface to the report, Marc H. Morial, President and CEO, National Urban League, states that the authors "… examine many facets of children’s home environment and experiences that foster cognitive development and school achievement, from birth throughout the period of formal schooling." This perspective, however, fails to note that the cognitive development of children actually BEGINS BEFORE BIRTH as the fertilized ovum develops in the mother's womb, and of course cognitive development continues throughout the lifespan, not just during the period of formal schooling. The report by Barton & Coley presents a lot of data showing how many factors operating in the context of families affect the literacy development of children, including the amount of language spoken to children by parents, relationships of parent's educational achievement to children's literacy achievement, parent's socio-economic status and amount of reading to their children, and so forth. Yet, despite all these relationships which are dependent upon parent's language and literacy achievement, most of the conclusions and recommendations focus upon the development of more involvement of parents with schools and improving educational opportunities for early childhood education. Regarding adult education, the authors take just 26 words to provide three recommendations, "…providing instruction in parenting skills to those who need them, teaching non-reading parents how to read, and helping families obtain suitable reading materials for their homes." Following this cursory treatment of adult education, Barton & Coley then move on to argue for early education interventions for children and cite research calling for a major expansion and intensification of Head Start and Early Head Start. This moves the call for educational investments away from meeting the educational needs of adults, back to making major investments in education starting with the birth of children in Early Head Start. That idea that literacy development starts at birth is implicitly challenged in the report of the Director of the National Institute of Literacy (NIFL) to the NIFL Advisory Board in October 2007 (Baxter, 2007). In her report, Baxter mentions one role of the NIFL as "…promoting and supporting scientifically-based and other rigorous research on how adults, youth, and children learn to read—literacy across the lifespan." If ones lifespan is considered to begin with conception, then this lifespan perspective on literacy development does recognize the importance of education from conception through birth and on into and across adulthood. However, thinking in terms of a single lifespan, even from conception to death, does not directly address the effects of the behavior of adults in the fostering of literacy BEFORE CHILDREN ARE CONCEIVED. Interestingly, Barton & Coley review research on the pre-conception behaviors of adults which are correlated with children's literacy acquisition. This includes factors such as out-of-wedlock births, meaning that the adults did not engage in marriage behavior before conceiving a child, and the consequential effect of raising children with a single parent rather than two, failure to complete secondary or post-secondary education, and failure of adults to be employed and earning self-sufficient incomes prior to having children. All of these factors that happen even before adults conceive and give birth to children have an effect on the next generation's literacy development. The fact of this intergenerational transfer of literacy from one generation to the next indicates that an education policy which focuses on a single lifespan, or education from birth to death, is a necessary but insufficient policy for making sustainable improvements in the literacy abilities of America's families. What is needed is a Multiple Life Cycles education policy that explicitly takes into account the intergenerational transfer from parents to their progeny of literacy and other cognitive and non-cognitive factors that also influence educational achievement across generations. Presently, several research studies on early childhood intervention programs have shown that such programs have produced considerable benefits in return to costs. What has not been emphasized however, is that most of the important early childhood education studies have also reported major changes in the behaviors of parents, especially mothers, of the children (Sticht, 2006). There is reason to believe that a goodly share of the effects of such preschool programs results from the educational effects of the programs on the parents. Current family literacy programs that emphasize early childhood education, parent education, adult education, and parent and child together education provide a valuable approach to fostering the literacy levels of families. They may also have multiplier effects in that the adult education, including parenting, may affect the educational achievements of any future children born to the parents whose parenting and literacy skills are improved in the programs. Needed: A "Before You Start Families" Program Family literacy programs that require parents and children to be educated together are already behind in affecting the behavior of the parents before they conceive children for the first time. For this there is needed a major emphasis upon those teenagers and young adults who have struggled in school and who will become parents later on. Before Early Head Start, which starts at birth, we need a Before You Start Families program that will affect pre-conception behaviors. We also need to make certain that more of the resources for Early Head Start, Head Start, and Family Literacy programs are focused on the education of the parents. This way, there should be less need for special interventions for the future children of these parents, and the parents should be able to achieve more in their own lives, provide better for their children, and improve their own health and lives after their children are grown-up. The Multiple Life Cycles Education policy explicitly recognizes that literacy and other cognitive skills are not developed simply from birth to death, or across the lifespan from "from womb to tomb". Instead, there is an intergenerational transfer of literacy and other cognitive skills from parents to their children. From this perspective, skills development starts in the next life cycle even before the child is conceived. Today, with a one life cycle focus, there is a serious lack of efforts to promote a positive transfer of skills across generations A Before You Start Families idea is one approach to acting on the basis of a Multiple Life Cycles program. No doubt, others can come up with additional approaches to improving family literacy through a Multiple Life Cycles approach. References Barton, P. & Coley, R. (2007). The Family: America's Smallest School. Princeton, NJ: Educational Testing Service. (Retrieved November 1, 2007 from www.ets.org/research/pic) Baxter, S. (2007, October). Director's Report: FY 2006-2007: Reflecting on Our Achievements. (Online at: www.nifl.gov) Sticht, T. (2006, December). Toward a Multiple Life Cycles Education Policy: Investing in the Education of Adults to Improve the Educability of Children. (Online at: http://www.nald.ca/library/research/sticht/06dec/06dec.pdf Taylor, D. (1983). Family Literacy: Young Children Learning to Read and to Write. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. Thomas G. Sticht International Consultant in Adult Education 2062 Valley View Blvd. El Cajon, CA 92019-2059 Tel/fax: (619) 444-9133 Email: tsticht at aznet.net ---------------------------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Poverty, Race, Women and Literacy mailing list PovertyRaceWomen at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/povertyracewomen ____________________________________________________________________________________ Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page. http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/diversity/attachments/20071124/df33bd0c/attachment.html
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