Media Release
August 1 2006
Babies bounce ahead in early literacy program
Parents who encourage ‘live’ language learning by reading with their
babies and singing and chanting rhymes can give their children a head
start of up to five years of language-rich interaction before starting
school, according to UniSA’s
Associate Professor in Early Childhood Education, Susan Hill.
The importance of literacy development in the years before school has
been well documented, with previous Australian research strongly
supporting the connections between children’s oral language development
and later academic success in literacy.
Prof Hill says library-based literacy programs targeting very young
children 0-2 years are relatively new in Australia, with Western
Australia and South Australia the first states to initiate early
literacy programs.
Research from the United States into the brain function and oral
language development of babies and toddlers has led to the creation of
library programs that are very fast paced, active programs where babies
grasp musical instruments, interact with and are stimulated by other
babies, and listen to music, songs and rhymes.
The impact of a range of early literacy programs for 0-2 year old
children initiated by public libraries was explored by Prof Hill in
three diverse geographic and socioeconomic South Australian communities.
“The idea of engaging young children with ‘live language’, which is
different from television programs or CD-ROMS, resulted in library
programs shifting from a predominantly book reading focus to a
rhyme-action program called Baby Bounce,” Prof Hill said.
Prof Hill was a key researcher in the Baby Bounce program, in which
babies and parents participate in up to 25-30 rhymes organised into
bounce songs, action songs, finger plays, body part songs, numeracy
songs and a lullaby.
“Because the rhymes are accompanied by clapping and percussion
instruments, the words are broken into syllables and sounds in a form of
language play, and this helps children attend to spoken language,” Prof
Hill said.
The physically different characteristics of the 0-2 year olds
highlighted the need for most babies to sit on parents’ laps. With some
babies becoming mobile, there was a clear need to keep the babies
engaged so that they didn’t move off.
“In even the simplest action songs, the whole brain and body are
engaged, which is important for the baby’s development,” Prof Hill said.
Public Library Services, in consultation with Prof Hill, developed an
innovative early literacy training and development program for library
staff, funded by the Local Government Research and Development Fund and
Local Government Association.
More than 200 library staff participated in the program and then
developed innovative sessions that provided rich experiences in phonemic
awareness - awareness of words, syllables, rhymes, alliteration and the
individual sounds in spoken language that are linked to oral language
development.
“In the Baby Bounce program, library staff use a teddy or doll to
demonstrate actions that parents can do with their babies, and put songs
on a big chart so that parents can sing the words. Traditional songs
like ‘London Bridge is falling down’ are sometimes modified with words
like ‘Hi, hello and how are you?’. Body parts are taught in, ’Heads,
shoulders, knees and toes’ and numeracy in ’One, two, three, four, five,
once I caught a fish alive’.
“These action rhymes encourage greater parent-child participation and
interaction, and parents say that music holds their baby’s attention
better than storytelling,” Prof Hill said.
“Parents were often amazed that their babies anticipated the songs,
rhymes and the actions at such an early age. Many parents said that they
now sang and played more with their babies at home and used songs as a
distraction and for entertainment. They expressed an overwhelming mutual
enjoyment of the Baby Bounce program.”
One parent commented, “I have learned how to make babies smile”.
Another spin-off has been increased borrowing of books for babies and
increased library use and membership. For many parents, socialising with
other parents and baby-to-baby socialising were the key to the program’s
success.
Prof Hill’s research is part of a state-wide early childhood reading
program launched in partnership with state and local government, The
Advertiser, the South Australian public library network and Child and
Youth Health, which is designed to encourage parents and other carers to
read aloud to their children.
According to Acting Associate Director, Public Library Services Teresa
Brook, the program received an overwhelming response from library staff
in regional and metropolitan SA, and will be delivered to library staff
in the ACT and NSW.
Prof Hill said the research highlights a need for a national initiative
to encourage early literacy initiatives for the 0-2 year old age group
in all communities, with additional support for programs in more remote
communities where distance is a barrier to participation.
Media contact
- Geraldine Hinter office (08) 8302 0963 mobile 0417 861 832 email geraldine.hinter@unisa.edu.au
