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Developing literacy skills

 
by Martha A. Lane (contributor)
Delle P. Matthews (contributor)
Leah B. Walter (contributor)
Glenys Waters (contributor)
Anne Klaassens (editor)
Trudy K. Stewart (editor, contributor)
 

Introduction
 

There are a variety of activities you may use along with your reading method to help learners develop literacy skills in

 
  • phonemic awareness
  • reading
  • writing, and
  • spelling.
 

Many of these activities also help build a positive attitude towards reading and writing by helping learners develop confidence in their growing skills.

Guidelines
  Here are some guidelines to follow when you use activities for developing literacy skills:
 

Here are some guidelines to follow when you use activities for developing literacy skills:

 
  • Use appropriate activities with everyone, from those who cannot yet read and write to those who are already fairly fluent readers and writers.
  • Use activities to help people who can already read and write in one language to make the transition to reading and writing in another language.
  • Use activities as a supplement to a total literacy program. Used in isolation, they will not efficiently teach a person to read or write.
Things to do
  Here are things to do when you develop literacy skills:
 
 

Fluency

 
Sources
 

Context for this page:

Go to SIL home page This page is an extract from the LinguaLinks Library, Version 4.0, published on CD-ROM by SIL International, 1999. [Ordering information.]

Page content last modified: 22 October 1999

© 1999 SIL International