Unit 1
Unit 1
SKILLS
Structure
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Meaning of Various Language Skills
1.2.1 Listening
1.2.2 Speaking
1.2.3 Reading
1.2.4 Writing
1.3 The Role of Thinking in Language Development
1.3.1 Language Supports Thinking
1.3.2 Thought Supports Language
1.4 Difference between Oral and Written Language and the Implications
for Teaching
1.5 Teaching LSRW (+Thinking) in an Integrated Manner: Misconceptions
and Implications
1.6 Summing Up
1.7 Answers to Check Your Progress Exercises
1.1 INTRODUCTION
We use language to talk, listen, read and write. There are four major language
skills — listening (L), speaking (S), reading (R) and writing (W). While
listening and speaking are oral language skills, reading and writing are
written language skills. Listening and reading are also called receptive skills
(the child receives communication in an oral or written form of language);
speaking and writing are expressive skills (the child expresses herself using
the oral or written form of language). The development of each of these skills
is significant for the language and literacy development of the child.
In day-to-day life, we do not think much about these skills of language.
However, as a teacher, you need to know about these language skills because
a correct understanding will influence how you will teach language during
the pre-primary and early primary school years. Therefore, in this Unit, we
will discuss the key language skills. This understanding will later help you
develop and support children’s language development.
Objectives
After reading this Unit, you will be able to:
• explain the meaning of each of the four language skills – listening (L),
speaking (S), reading (R) and writing (W);
• discuss how thinking is integrated with language and feeds into the
development of LSRW skills;
• differentiate between oral and written language; and
• understand the simultaneous and integrated development of the skills of
listening, speaking, reading and writing.
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Curriculum and
Pedagogy for 1.2 MEANING OF VARIOUS LANGUAGE SKILLS
Language and
Literacy: Part 1 Listening, speaking, reading, and writing are the four key language skills. In
Figure 1a, listening and speaking skills are listed as ‘oral language skills’
while reading and writing are listed as ‘written skills’. We can also refer to
reading and writing as ‘print-based skills’.
1.2.1 Listening
Have a look at the given example to understand what listening consists of.
At the beginning of the new academic session, new children were enrolled in
Sarita’s class, a primary school teacher in Lucknow. Sarita asked all
children to introduce themselves by telling their names and age. Most of the
children spoke in Hindi and some in English. One child, Alok, hesitated to
speak. After much persuasion, he introduced himself in Oriya, “Mo nama
Aloka banga. Mu cha barshaa ayura. (My name is Alok. I am six years old.)”
Children looked in amazement and confusion at him as they could not
understand what Alok said. However, another student Mili, who was
bilingual and knew Oriya and Hindi introduced herself to Alok in Oriya with
a big smile saying, “Mo name Mili, Alok. (My name is Mili, Alok.)”
In the above example, Alok addressed the entire class but only one girl could
respond to Alok while others were quiet. Why do you think this happened?
Could only Mili hear Alok? Of course not! It happened because Mili knew
the Oriya language and she could not only hear what Alok said (like other
children) but could understand (comprehend) the meaning of his words too,
and thus, she could listen to Alok. The rest of the class could hear Alok
saying something but they could not listen to him as they did not know
Alok’s language.
While in this instance, listening did not take place because children did not
know Alok’s language, however, listening might not take place even when
the language of the speaker is known to the listener. Let us understand with
12 the help of an example.
Amit told his sister to bring some toffees on her way back home. The sister, Introduction to
Language Skills
who was in a hurry, nodded to Amit and left home. In the evening, Amit’s
sister returned with two coffee packets for Amit. To this, the mother said,
“Did you even listen to him?”
In this example, while Amit’s sister knew the language, and heard Amit, but
she was in a hurry to leave the house, she did not listen to him. She took
‘coffee’ for ‘toffee’.
Both these examples make it clear that ‘hearing’ refers to receiving any and
every sound in the environment, but ‘listening’ implies hearing with
comprehension. In a marketplace, many sounds and many people are
speaking. We hear these sounds but we listen to the shopkeeper from whom
we buy things. This means that we not only hear the shopkeeper but we also
try to understand and analyze it. In other words, we try to comprehend its
meaning. Hence, ‘listening’ is ‘hearing with applying comprehension to
understand what has been heard’. When the child understands the meaning of
what has been said, it means that the child has acquired listening
comprehension. So listening comprehension means understanding the
meaning of spoken words.
1.2.2 Speaking
Let us discuss what we understand by speaking with the help of the given
example.
Now can one say that while reciting the English poem word to word, children
were speaking the English language? In a way, they were speaking but did
they know the meaning of the poem they were reciting so fluently? So the
answer is ‘No’; no speaking is taking place in this instance. It is because
speaking is not about simply uttering words, though we can say that it is a
part of it. The skill of speaking consists of speaking with understanding,
instead of merely repeating or uttering words or sentences whose meaning is
unknown to the speaker herself. So just as in the case of listening, speaking
also involves comprehension. The speaker must understand what she is
speaking, even if her speech is not fully grammatically correct.
1.2.3 Reading
Read the given line: “Hana wasakuragi, hitowabushi.”
Could you read it? Yes, you could speak out what was written and so you
would say you read it. But did you understand what you read? No! It is
because what you read is written in the Japanese language and you probably
do not know the Japanese language. If you do not know and understand the
words of the Japanese language, you would not understand what you read.
What you did when you read the sentence was decoding – that is, you could
associate each letter with its sound and you spoke out the written word based
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Curriculum and on letter-sound relationships. Decoding is part of reading, but reading is more
Pedagogy for
Language and than decoding. Just like speaking and listening, reading also involves the
Literacy: Part 1 aspect of comprehension (understanding the meaning). Reading without
understanding is only the mechanical act of saying out aloud the sounds in
the words; no meaning is extracted or assigned to these words.
You must have seen children read a paragraph or a sentence but when you
ask them to explain its meaning they cannot do so. They can decode the text
because they know the letter-sound relationships or because that text has
been read out to them so many times that they have memorized the words
visually and read it fluently, giving the impression that they are
understanding what they are reading. However, that is not the case. They do
not comprehend the text. We cannot call this ‘reading’ because children have
not understood what they have read. The ability to decode a text is a part of
reading, but not reading in its wholeness. Unless a person understands the
meaning of what has been read, we cannot call it ‘reading’. Therefore,
reading consists of two aspects: word recognition and language
comprehension. In both of these aspects, many competencies are
involved. Let us understand this with the help of Figure 1b as shared below.
Figure 1b suggests that reading consists of two major aspects, i.e., language
comprehension and word recognition. Each of these aspects includes
competencies that a child uses to read a text. While competencies such as
phonological awareness, decoding (phonics) and sight recognition help a
child to identify/recognize a word, she comprehends a text by employing her
background knowledge (also called prior knowledge), vocabulary, and
understanding of meanings (semantics), understanding of the grammatical
structure of the language, verbal reasoning and literacy knowledge. You have
read about the emergence of reading and writing behaviours in young
children in Block 6 of MCD-001. While the ability to comprehend text
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begins to develop spontaneously as the child begins to acquire oral language Introduction to
Language Skills
development (though comprehension also needs to be further developed
through teaching as well), the competencies concerned with word recognition
are, by and large, not spontaneous and require explicit teaching, especially
the competency of phonics.
1.2.4 Writing
If asked to define ‘writing’, how would you define it? Probably many of you
would say that writing is the ability to form letters and words. However, what
if children can copy letters or words, and can also read what they have copied
but cannot explain what they have written? In other words, if they do not
know the meaning of what they have written, would you call this ‘writing’?
Not really, because the comprehension aspect is missing. The ability to
form/copy letters and words might be a part of writing, but writing is
certainly much more than this. If one does not know or cannot explain what
she is writing, one is simply engaged in a meaningless act of copying and this
does not count as writing.
On the other hand, if a 3-year-old child makes some straight and curved lines
on paper (scribbling) and on asking explains to you what she has drawn,
would you consider these marks on paper to be writing? Some of you may
say that these are scribbles and not writing since there are no letters and the
child has not used the conventional script to write a word. Actually, these
scribbles are the first signs of writing and show that the child is an emerging
writer. You have read about this in Unit 28 of MCD-001. Let us recall this
aspect in detail so that we develop our understanding of how writing emerges
in children.
Once the child has made some marks on paper (which we call ‘scribble’,) and
you ask her, “What have you made/drawn/written?”, then the child who had
some thoughts before she made the mark, will express that thought. This
mark or scribble, therefore, is the child’s writing since it is a thoughtful
expression. Many parents and teachers do not understand that writing is
essentially a way of expressing one’s thoughts and ideas through any type of
symbol. These symbols can be letters of a language or pictures or any other
symbol (such as the symbol of a skull and two crossed bones, which is used
to represent ‘danger’) or a combination of these all. Let us understand this
further with the help of the writing of a three-and-a-half-year-old boy shared
as follows (Figure 1c).
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Curriculum and
Pedagogy for
Language and
Literacy: Part 1
Do you think that the child has written something meaningful and which can
be understood? Probably not from an adult’s point of view but if we see it
from the child’s perspective who has written it, it holds meaning. In the given
sample, the child has written a ‘poem’ on the topic ‘Monkey’, similar to a
poem the teacher read out in class two days ago. When the teacher asked the
child to tell her what he had drawn, he said that he had written a poem and he
‘read out’ his poem to the teacher, running his finger from left to right across
the lines of scribbles, just as we would do to read a conventional script. In the
sample, the child has represented a real-world creature (monkey) with its
drawing and conventional letters and sentences with scribbles; he understood
the line-like nature of the written poem and so he made horizontal scribbles
in lines, one after the other. This is called ‘symbolization’, where one thing
stands for something else and this is the first level of symbolization. The next
level of symbolization is when a child learns to use conventional letters
instead of pictures and scribbles, which we call this learning to ‘read’ and
‘write’. So the child’s drawing and scribbles will be considered as an early
stage of writing because the child uses these as symbols to express a
meaning. So drawing, scribbling, reading and writing using the conventional
script, all involve the insight that symbols have meaning.
All of these early attempts at writing show the child’s growing interest and
understanding of print; these should not be dismissed. We only consider
conventional writing using letters to write words and sentences as ‘correct’
writing. However, this is the final stage of writing and there are many stages
before the child reaches this stage, which we adults must recognize and
appreciate. We are often worried about how soon children will learn to write
accurately like adults. Without worrying much about it, we need to
understand that moving from scribbling to drawing to a mix of scribbling,
drawing, and script to invented spellings to conventional writing is a process
of learning to symbolize. This process will take time and during the process,
there will be several phases in which pictures and conventional symbols will
be mixed together.
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So, we conclude that writing, like listening, speaking and reading, is a Introduction to
Language Skills
meaning-making exercise. We (both adults as well as children) write to
express our thoughts. It is the act of composing and putting one’s thoughts
together on a paper/board using symbols. Thus, writing is not simply
equivalent to a mechanical process of forming letters and words.
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Curriculum and 2) “Children’s scribbles should be accepted as writing.” Elaborate.
Pedagogy for
Language and ……………………………………………………………………………
Literacy: Part 1
……………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………
A five-year-old was fascinated by the farming tools that she saw her father
using every day. Pointing to each of his farming tools, she asked her father,
“Papa, what is this?” To which her father replied, “That’s a pruner. Oh, it is
a pipe. This one is a seed-sower.” The young girl learnt the names and
simultaneously, her father also showed her what each tool was used for.
In the example given above, it is quite evident that the naming or labelling of
objects helped the child to understand that each has its own name and
function. In this way, her thinking was expanded, and by knowing the name
of each tool, she could easily remember the information related to that tool.
The child formed a concept of each tool; the thought was supported through
language.
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Let us understand this through another example. When a young child is Introduction to
Language Skills
introduced to a word, say the word ‘Horse’ she is also introduced to the
concept of a ‘Horse’. Initially, the child may refer to many different four-
legged animals as ‘Horse’. However, as her vocabulary and understanding of
what exactly the word ‘Horse’ stands for develops, she names different four-
legged animals with their respective names. Thus, she forms a concept of all
these different animals. Similarly, having a vocabulary for different kinds of
emotions helps a child to identify and differentiate her feelings and explain
whether it is anger, or irritation, or frustration, or depression, or anything
else. As their vocabulary expands, so does her thinking.
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Curriculum and
Pedagogy for 1.4 DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ORAL AND
Language and
Literacy: Part 1
WRITTEN LANGUAGE AND THE
IMPLICATIONS FOR TEACHING
We use both oral and written language to communicate with each other in our
daily lives. We need to support the development of oral and written language
skills in the child as well as teach these through classroom instruction as well.
One of the key differences between these two is of the context. In oral
communication, both the listener and the speaker are familiar with the
context of the communication because they are present in the same situation
and there is immediate feedback or clarification. This does not happen in the
case of written communication because the reader and the writer are not
present together. The cues which can be seen and heard in oral
communication and which help us to understand the context of the
communication and the meaning (gestures, facial expressions, voice
modulation) are not present in written communication and so the writer has to
insert the nonverbal cues into the text.
Now imagine, if this sentence was a part of a storybook wherein one person
speaks to another one, “तुम ये काम करोगे”. How will you as a reader understand
what this sentence actually means?
Here, you will require more information, cues in the written form to
understand the exact meaning. Let us see how this can be achieved by
referring to the given sentences.
In the above sentence, adding an exclamation mark (!) showed that the
speaker is giving a command. By adding a question mark (?) at the end of the
sentence it was made evident that the speaker is asking a question. The writer
20 added the symbol ‘।’ and extra words in the third and fourth sentences to
make the reader understand that the former is a request and the latter is Introduction to
Language Skills
intended to mock the other person.
However, many people hold the following five incorrect views with respect
to the four skills of language. These predominant beliefs and practices are
discussed below, wherein we have discussed why they are problematic, and
what is the actual learning and development pattern of children’s language
skills.
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Curriculum and a) The first incorrect belief is that listening and speaking develop fully
Pedagogy for
Language and before the skill of reading and writing start to develop. However, this
Literacy: Part 1 is not true. As you have read a child of two years makes scribbles and if
you ask her she can tell you what she has drawn. She is still learning the
oral language but she has started to show writing behaviours too. A
three-year-old child runs her fingers over the pages of a familiar
storybook as if she is actually reading a story. This child is showing
reading behaviours while her oral language is still developing.
Implication for Teaching: Breaking these language skills into
compartments and teaching these separately does not support the natural
learning pattern of the child. This makes the process of language learning
sequential and mechanical for the child. The prime purpose of teaching
language should be to develop a child’s interest in listening speaking,
reading and writing. This segmentation takes away the joy and the
interest of the child in language learning too. So we actually need to
integrate the teaching of LSRW. The following example shows us how
the teaching of LSRW can be integrated.
A Grade 1 teacher first described a poem and then recited it to the
children. Then the teacher and the children also recited it together a few
times. After this, she asked children to make drawings in response to the
poem or they could write their own poem using their own words and
imagination. Children began to draw. A few attempted to write a poem.
One of the children drew horizontal lines one under another. The teacher
approached her and the following conversation took place:
Child: The child ran her finger over the horizontal lines and said some
relevant sentences about her house, such as, “My house has three rooms.
It is in Delhi.”
Though the child had not written any text using the conventional script of
language, he read as if something conventional was written.
In this example, the child and the teacher are both listening and speaking
and the child also shows early reading and writing behaviours. This child
must have seen a poem written in a book (or a chart paper) as it was
being read out to her; so now she tries to replicate the structure of the
poem in her writing by drawing lines one under the other, which
represent ‘sentences’. You know that children’s early or emergent
writing is in the form of drawings, lines, shapes, pictures, letter-like
formation. So listening to others when they were reading, seeing them
using a book to read, and seeing the text in the book has lead the child to
‘writing’.
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So the above example shows how in the past, the child’s listening, Introduction to
Language Skills
speaking, reading and writing abilities developed simultaneously and
together. Also, as the teacher and the child continue to engage in
conversation about what the child has written, L, S, R and W continued
to develop together. So, as this example suggests, all language skills
develop simultaneously.
d) The fourth incorrect belief is that output by the child in the form of
speaking and writing can emerge without adequate input in the form
of listening and reading. For instance, many teachers expect the child to
be good at speaking and writing (expressive skills) without developing
listening and reading (receptive skills) adequately. This is like expecting
an output without giving input. If a child does not have adequate
language input through listening and reading, she will also not be able to
produce language either through speaking or writing. In short, if we wish
our children to be fluent speakers and expressive writers, we will have to
offer them an environment that offers them enough resources and
opportunities to listen and read so that they can develop interest and gain
mastery over their skills in speaking and writing too. On the contrary,
usually, in a formal language learning class, we see very little language
input given to a child. We do give some inputs but these are not
adequate. A child is expected to speak on a topic, without getting a
chance to ever listen to a variety of speeches that others would have
made. We demand our children write flawless compositions without
offering them first-hand experience in exploring and reading a variety of
literature from a young age itself.
Implication for Teaching: If this belief prevails, the teacher is not likely
to create opportunities that allow the child to explore and engage with
listening and reading experiences. This leads to burdening the child as
we do not offer adequate resources and experiences to develop her
language skills. Therefore, the teacher needs to ensure that a language-
rich environment is created for the child wherein she has access and
opportunity to explore and make sense of various resources and inputs
that may strengthen her language and literacy skills. Also, though
providing relevant and timely input in the form of listening and reading
opportunities is critical, it is not sufficient. We also need to teach
speaking and writing explicitly to children for them to show significant
improvement.
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Curriculum and e) The fifth incorrect belief is that it is adequate to learn a language
Pedagogy for
Language and only based on the content given in the textbook for that class.
Literacy: Part 1 Usually, a teacher teaches the chapters and content of the textbook
and feels this is enough to develop the child’s language.
1.6 SUMMING UP
There are four major skills of language – listening, speaking, reading, and
writing. Contrary to popular belief, all of these skills develop simultaneously
and also feed into the development of each other. Therefore, while teaching
language, one has to keep in mind that language learning is a holistic
phenomenon. At the same time, language is essentially a process of meaning-
making; thinking is an integral part of language learning. Teaching LSRW
need not be a mechanical, sequential and boring exercise. In fact, the prime
purpose of language learning should be to develop independent and creative
thinking beings who can make sense of the world and also express
themselves through various language skills. Therefore, the focus should be on
building and developing an understanding of how language works, instead of
mechanically teaching LSRW skills.
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