Literacy Standards
The following indicators outline the developmental benchmarks and literacy behaviors that most children display at a particular age/grade. All are aligned with guidelines and standards established by the Arizona Department of Education. Seen together, they show the progression of development over time, but it is important to remember that all children develop at a different pace and follow varied patterns of development.
For very young children, key components of language and communication development include modeling conversations, book handling, and picture/story comprehension. For preschool and K-3 students, indicators of developing language and emergent literacy provide a clear overview of the learning goals to be achieved by the end of each year. Across the higher grades, indicators may have similar wording, but they are to be applied with increased focus to progressively more challenging texts and tasks.
Receptive Language Understanding
Demonstrates understanding of directions, stories, conversations, and nonverbal cues.
- Demonstrates understanding of a variety of finger-plays, rhymes, chants and songs, poems, conversations, and stories.
- Engages actively in finger-plays, rhymes, chants and songs, poems, conversations, and stories.
- Demonstrates understanding and follows directions that involve one step, two steps, or multiple steps.
Expressive Language and Communication Skills
Uses verbal and nonverbal communication for a variety of purposes: to share observations, ideas, experiences; to problem-solve, reason, predict, seek new information, and make connections.
- Communicates needs, wants, ideas, and feelings through three- to five-word sentences.
- Speaks clearly and understandably to express ideas, feelings, and needs.
- Makes culturally relevant responses (both verbal and nonverbal) to questions and comments from others.
- Initiates, sustains, and expands conversations with peers and adults using open-ended responses.
- With modeling and support, child uses language that includes social rules; e.g., pragmatics, appropriate tone, volume, and inflection to express ideas, feelings, and needs.
- Uses culturally relevant responses such as eye contact, turn taking, and intonation while having conversations with adults and peers.
- Recognizes when the listener does not understand and varies the amount of information to clarify the message.
- With modeling and support, uses increasingly complex phrases and sentences.
Vocabulary
Understands and uses increasingly complex vocabulary.
- Uses rich vocabulary across many topic areas to express ideas and events.
- Figures out the meanings of unfamiliar words and concepts using the context of conversations, pictures that accompany text, or concrete objects.
- Uses category labels and names objects within a category (e.g., fruit, vegetable, animal, transportation).
- Demonstrates understanding of, and uses words that indicate, position and direction (e.g., in, on, out, under, over, off, beside, behind).
Concepts of Print
Knows that print carries messages.
- Identifies signs, symbols, and labels in a variety of environments (environmental print).
- Demonstrates and understands that print conveys meaning and that each spoken word can be written and read.
- Recognizes that letters are grouped to form words.
- Recognizes own written name and the written names of friends and family.
- Seeks information in printed materials.
Book Handling Skills
Demonstrates how to handle books appropriately and with care.
- Holds a book right side up with the front cover facing the reader and understands left to right and top to bottom directionality.
- Identifies where in the book to begin reading.
- Understands a book has a title, author, and/or illustrator.
Phonological Awareness
Develops awareness that language can be broken into words, syllables, and smaller units of sounds (phonemes).
- Differentiates between sounds that are the same and different (e.g., environmental sounds, animal sounds, phonemes).
- Identifies rhyming words.
- Produces rhyming words.
- Recognizes spoken words that begin with the same sound.
- Hears and shows awareness of separate words within spoken phrases or sentences.
- Identifies and discriminates syllables in words.
- Combines onset and rime to form a familiar one-syllable word with and without pictorial support.
Alphabet Knowledge
Demonstrates knowledge of the alphabet; identifies letters and produces correct sounds associated with several letters.
- Discriminates letters from other shapes and symbols.
- Matches and recognizes similarities and differences in letters, with modeling and support.
- Recognizes an increasing number of letters, especially those in their own name, familiar objects, family, and friends.
- Demonstrates understanding of letters by producing letter forms using a variety of materials (e.g., playdough, blocks, marker, and paper).
- Uses letter-sound knowledge, identifying the sounds of a few letters and producing the correct sounds for an increasing number of letters.
Comprehension and Text Structure
Demonstrates an understanding of narrative structure through storytelling, questioning, and recall.
- Takes an active role in reading activities.
- Identifies characters and major events in a story.
- Asks and answers a variety of questions about books or stories told or read aloud.
- Draws connections between story events and personal experiences.
- Identifies events and details in the story and makes predictions.
- Gives an opinion for liking or disliking a book or story.
- Begins to demonstrate an understanding of the differences between fiction and non-fiction.
- Identifies the topic of informational text that has been read aloud.
- Retells or reenacts a story in sequence with pictures or props.
- Begins to demonstrate reading fluency by use of phrasing, intonation, and expression in shared reading of familiar books, poems, chants, songs, nursery rhymes, or other repetitious or predictable texts.
Emergent Writing
Engages in a variety of writing activities and begins to convey meaning through their increasingly sophisticated marks.
- Uses a variety of writing tools, materials, and surfaces to create drawings or symbols.
- Writes own name using letter-like forms or conventional print.
- Intentionally uses scribbles/writing and inventive writing to convey meaning, ideas, or to tell a story (e.g., signing artwork, captioning, labeling, creating lists, making notes).
- Forms letters starting with large motor (sky writing, paint brush and water, sidewalk chalk) progressing to fine motor (paper and writing utensil).
- Organizes writing from left to right, indicating a print awareness that letters cluster as words and words cluster into phrases or sentences by use of spacing or marks.
Source: Arizona Department of Education, Arizona Early Learning Standards
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