|
| ||
|
The whole language instructional program |
||
| ||
| Introduction | |
|
Whole language instructional programs are based on the whole language philosophy. This module describes features of a typical whole language program but you should realize there are many variations. | |
| Description | |
|
The whole language instructional program is one that | |
| |
| Discussion | |
|
The whole language philosophy has been developing since the early '70's. “During this time, research in language and language learning ... has strengthened the theoretical foundations of whole language.” (Edelsky, Altwerger, and Flores 1991). However, it initially grew from the work of by Goodman 1969 in the field of the psycholinguistic analysis of the reading process. | |
|
The philosophy is based on the view that when learners are learning to read and write they are not just learning a set of skills, but they are acquiring a network of strategies for operating on or with text. (Clay 1991) | |
|
Whole language programs do not try to control which sources of information in a text a learner uses or what a learner learns first. They do not prevent the learner's exposure to any aspect of the task. (Clay 1991) | |
|
Whole language does not mean there is no direct instruction, but that instruction is embedded in meaningful, authentic literacy events. Some of the direct teaching in Whole language includes | |
| |
| Warning | |
|
The term “whole language” means different things to different people. Some teachers only implement parts of what whole language programs should be like. | |
| Theoretical orientation | |
|
Whole language programs encourage learners to use the cues that print provides--prediction, context clues, letter-sound correspondences, and their own personal knowledge of language systems and of the world--to decode text. Therefore, if conducted properly, such programs are based on an interactive reading model. | |
| Features | |
|
Here are some features of the whole language instructional program: | |
| |
| Assumptions | |
|
Here are some assumptions of the whole language instructional program: | |
| |
| Materials | |||||||
|
Here are some materials required for the whole language instructional program: | |||||||
| |||||||
| |||||||
| Parts | |||
|
Here are the parts of the whole language instructional program: | |||
| |||
| Example | |
|
Here is an example of pages from a whole language curriculum guide and of a typical lesson: | |
| Sample: Primer pages | |
|
Here are some sample primer pages from the whole language instructional program: | |
| See also | |
|
See the following online article for more information: | |
| Sources | |
Context for this page:
Page content last modified: 26 August 1999 |
|
© 1999 SIL International |