Last week I was
on a tour through central Illinois leading concerts in church basements and
fellowship halls for families involved in the Head Start program.
(Head Start is a
federal program that provides comprehensive education, health, nutrition,
and parent involvement services to low-income children and their families.)
It was at one of
these concerts that I spotted a literacy specialist doing exactly what early
childhood literacy specialists do best.......looking for opportunities to help
young children actively listen and make sense of the language around them and
helping them learn to pay special attention to those parts of the language that
are known to aid children in becoming successful readers.
I suppose this
person caught my eye, at first, because he was a man. It is still uncommon to see men working in the early
childhood field and I’m always happy when there are, at least, two of us in the
room!
But what kept
my attention was the way that this gentleman interacted with the child next to
him.
At one point in
the concert I led everyone in one of my rhyming games. The "Poison
Ivy" song.
Poison ivy under bushes.
Poison ivy under trees.
Poison ivy in the forest.
Poison ivy on my knees.
(chorus)
Poison ivy makes me scratch, scratch, scratch........
Itch and scratch my knees.
In the beginning
of the song I noticed the literacy specialist playfully and enthusiastically
"scratching" his knees as I sang the rousing chorus. The student next
to him watched him and laughed.
Then, as I sang
the lines of the second verse (leading up to the chorus), I saw that the literacy
specialist had tilted his head a bit and was making a point of acting as if he
was concentrating closely on the words:
Poison ivy by the daisy.
Poison ivy by the rose.
Poison ivy by the flower
That I smelled with my nose.
As I sang the
chorus about scratch, scratch, scratching my nose, I saw the gentleman pretend,
once again, to scratch his nose.
He turned and faced the student (a young girl) and, of course, the child
joyfully “scratched” her nose as well.
During the third
verse the specialist would alternate, dramatically, between listening to my
words (with the obvious rhyming cues) and making eye contact with the student. It was almost as though he was saying,
"Do you hear what I hear?
Listen....."
And then, of
course, he and the child excitedly "scratched" along once again.
This kind of
play went on, over and over, for the five verses of the song.
The literacy
specialist, through his play, demonstrated the active part of the song to get
the student's attention. But then, through his subtle cues, he also indicated
that if she listened to the words she might also start to guess the rhymes
before I even sang them!
Anyone watching
could have seen the teaching, the learning and the laughter!
But here is the
best part of the story. The man is
not a professional literacy specialist......or even a staff member at Head
Start. He is a dad. A dad who, at that moment, was simply sitting
next to his daughter and playing.
He is fortunate
enough to be involved in a program that offers opportunities for children and
adults to have proximity to one other and to interact. In my experience, adults have a natural inclination to become
teachers in this way when they are sitting next to the children they care about. And, with guidance, those caregivers
not inclined to get involved can become better at doing so.
Thankfully,
there are programs all over the country that encourage this sort of proximity
and interaction and, when needed, offer guidance. Public libraries offer story times for children and
the adults that care for them.
There is a wonderful program called Parents as Teachers. And, of course, there is Head Start.
When these
programs do it right, moms and dads and caregivers do the work of literacy
specialists.
And, from the
smiles and laughs I observed last week between that dad and his daughter, I
know this:
In this
instance, in his new role as a literacy specialist, that dad didn't mind going
to work at all!