Dialogic Reading: A Guide for New Parents | Sol Book Box

2022-08-19

Dialogic Reading: A Guide for New Parents

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Early reading can set your child up for a love of literature later in life. Reading at an early age also helps children develop empathy, speech skills, vocabulary, and literacy awareness. All of the skills young readers take away from their earliest experiences go on to influence how they interact with reading in the future.

As a parent, you can help establish a love of reading in your little one by practicing a technique called dialogic reading.

What is dialogic reading?

Dialogic reading is all about sharing a conversation with your child about the text you’re reading aloud. It helps children build their vocabularies and develop what experts call “verbal fluency” — the ability to speak clearly and retrieve words and other information from memory at will.

One of the issues young readers have is struggling to comprehend text that they’ve read. Often, this comes from the following model:

Parents or teachers take out a book, read it entirely, and then ask a child a few questions about what they read. The child may have a general idea of the story’s theme, or recall some small details, but they forget most, if not all of it, as soon as the book is put away.

Dialogic reading is an interactive process. It reshapes the way parents foster a love of reading with early readers.

In dialogic reading, the unfolding story is an active conversation.

Examples of Dialogic Reading

There are three levels of dialogic reading to know:

  • Level 1: Asking simple questions your reader can identify in the text. For example, “What color dress is the girl wearing?” or “Where do the animals live?” The goal is to have children use the book to find answers while building their vocabulary and sentence structure.
  • Level 2: You ask open-ended questions to let the child form their own opinions about the story. Children come up with their own ideas and opinions, while also building recall skills about what they’ve just read.
  • Level 3: Asking abstract questions that encourage your child to relate to the story. For example, you might ask, “That character seems really sad. Do you remember a time you felt like that?” or “How would you feel if that happened to you?”

The entire process of dialogic reading is meant to be fun, interactive, and explorative. It helps early readers build connections with the text and develop skills naturally. For young readers who are still developing speech skills, dialogic reading is a great way to encourage them to form new sentences and build their vocabulary.

Tips for Dialogic Reading Together

If you want to use dialogic reading with your child, here are some of our top tips for using this strategy.

Use the CROWD Acronym

CROWD is an easy-to-remember acronym that helps you remember what types of questions to ask:

  • C - completion questions like, “Row, row, row your _____”
  • R - recall questions like, “Why couldn’t the boy find his hat?”
  • O - open-ended questions like, “Why do you think they did that?”
  • W - “wh” questions like, “What was the princess wearing?”
  • D - distancing questions like, “How do you think the boy felt when his dog was lost?”
Prompt Dialogue, But Don’t Lead the Conversation

It’s important to make sure dialogue is focused on the child. While you’ll take the lead, they should be the ones filling in the blanks. For example, a prompt might be, “Yes, you’re right, the princess was wearing a dress. What else was she wearing?”

Encourage them to expand upon details in a friendly, nonjudgmental way. It’s not about getting the answer to questions right or wrong. It’s about helping them identify information in the text and learning from what they’re reading.

Teach Vocabulary Before Reading

Identify keywords in the story that you’d like your child to build upon during your dialogic reading. For example, if you were reading “The Very Hungry Caterpillar,” you may draw words like butterfly, cocoon, and sun.

These words make it easy for you to have more discussions later. You may talk about the sun, and how it helped the hungry caterpillar, or have your child draw their own butterfly and describe it.

Vary Your Questions

Avoid falling into a pattern of repeat questions. Children will quickly catch on and treat the reading more like homework than a conversation. Rather than just quizzing them, ask questions that encourage you both to talk about the story.

Evaluate Responses in a Kind Way

You don’t want early readers to get discouraged by getting answers wrong. Instead of saying, “No, that’s not right,” try something like, “Hmm, are you sure?” and offering some hints to the right response.

Expanding Vocabulary Through Dialogic Reading

There are three tiers of vocabulary for different levels of dialogic reading.

  • Tier 1: Basic words for everyday conversation
  • Tier 2: High-frequency words that are common but above a basic speaker’s level, such as adjectives, adverbs, and abstract nouns
  • Tier 3: Context-specific words that relate to a specific field, like “ecosystem” or “rhythm”

Each of these word groups will vary by age. Early readers will have more tier 1 words than their 3 words, but these words will increase as they get older and develop their skills.

All of these tiers are important, however, because they come together to create a cohesive story.

To really help children remember what they’ve read, it’s helpful to use the words in new ways in future conversations. You can reference the story itself, as well as just use the words in everyday dialogue.

Encourage Bilingualism

Bilingual readers can benefit greatly from reading stories in both languages. Consider reading the same story in both English and their target language, like Spanish. As children’s vocabularies grow, you can even work on translating sentences or specific words from the text together.

Another great strategy is reading in one language and having a dialogue about the story in another. This helps students understand both languages better and develop fluency in both thinking and speech.

With these strategies in mind, you can help your child become a confident reader who not only loves learning but loves sharing their thoughts, too!

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