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Nº. 2024 | 3

Teaching materials for literacy development

Teaching materials play a key role in schools: As tangible resources, they are indispensable tools which not only shape the subject areas or topics addressed in the classroom, but which also have a significant impact on pedagogy. They reflect specific concepts around subject matter as well as particular interpretations of learning and instruction. Consequently, teaching materials influence the terminology, approaches, exercises, and the deepening of content to be learnt, as well as shaping how these aspects are assessed and evaluated. This affords teaching materials considerable impact on school and curriculum development. They represent a way of directing instruction which teachers, drawing on the professional knowledge they have acquired at teacher training institutions, need to take a stance on and to respond to in some way.
This issue of Literacy Forum is therefore dedicated to how pedagogy is represented in teaching materials and how teaching materials shape pedagogy. We seek to illustrate how these foster literacy in the classroom and explore how teaching aids and other pedagogical objects find application teaching. More

  • Focus Article |  from science On using alphabet charts in early years instruction
    Practice theory analyses for harnessing an elusive tool from Romina Schmidt-Drechsler, Susanne Riegler, Mascha Berbig

    Alphabet charts have played a permanent role in initial instruction in the written language since the 1980s. First empirical studies offer insights into exemplary processes and the analysis of phonemes – which is contingent on many factors – in the transcription of letters using an alphabet chart. Beyond that, however, there is little evidence as to the application of alphabet charts in actual classroom practice. Our study is situated in practice theory and, taking participant lesson observations as our point of departure, we consider how alphabet charts are used in early instruction. In so doing, we draw on two case studies to demonstrate the different approaches taken to alphabet charts. In alignment with grounded theory, we use open and axial coding to identify a range of usages of alphabet charts: free writing, determining grapheme-phoneme correspondences, as well as the practice and development of transcription and decoding of text segments. Our findings can be seen as a way of ‘harnessing’ a classroom resource designed to help children learn in alignment with their interests and in a self-regulated manner.

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  • Focus Article |  from science Working with models in coursebooks
    Between added methodological value and content-level reservations from Rico Cathomas, Andrin Büchler

    We can assume that coursebooks play a significant role in shaping the object of learning, the respective school subject. However, they also serve to shape and direct classroom work and ideally offer instructors and students a solid basis for teaching and learning. The way they are implemented depends on (functional) assumptions or notions of effective coursebooks, which are often simplified, structured and visualised as (subject-specific) pedagogical models. 2016-2024 saw the (further) development and implementation of subject methodology models known as the ‘quality matrices’ [«Qualitätsquadranten»] and ‘language garden’ [«Sprachgarten»] in connection with the introduction of ‘Mediomatix’, the new coursebook series for Romansh. This paper introduces the models, offering first insights into how a part of the ‘language garden’ – the ‘parts of speech tree’ [«Baum der Wortarten»] – was implemented in Romansh coursebooks. We go on to critically discuss the ‘language garden’ and ‘parts of speech tree’ from the subject perspective and to evaluate their value for other languages from the perspective of language teaching methodology.

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  • Focus Article |  from science Pretend reading
    Written production and patterning in five-year olds from Kristina Strozyk

    Contemporary concepts for supporting language acquisition used in daycare centres for children focus on promoting syntax and lexis and are frequently dialogue-based. Giving children opportunities to write monological pieces means their pre-existing implicit knowledge of texts is activated. In a method known as ‘pretend reading’, preschool children were asked to ‘read’ aloud a picture book known to them. Data were gathered on four occasions in an approach inspired by design-based research models and settings tailored to the language behaviour demonstrated by the children. Findings clearly show the promising potential of present reading as a means to support language development. Our paper highlights here the use of patterning in children’s written production and the paper focuses on the use of chunks in pretend reading.

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  • Focus Article |  from practice Developing literacy with the listening portfolio from Ursula Käser-Leisibach, Claudia Zingg Stamm

    Hearing texts read aloud enables children to experience literary language and language originating in writing before they themselves are able to read. Audio media offer an interesting alternative to real-time reading aloud, as a wide range of genres and text types are available and these are attractively formatted. In this paper we introduce the project ‘Listening portfolio for lower primary years’ [1st to 3rd classes] which was financed by the FHNW Stiftung [Foundation]. It offers first to third classes tasks to support their development in listening. Learners can access all the audio recordings via QR-codes. They can choose whether to respond to the respective follow-up tasks by making a voice recording or by drawing, or whether they want to capture their responses in written form, depending on their level of competence in writing. The listening portfolio foregrounds prosody as a key characteristic of spoken language and the varied listening tasks provide learners with strategies for understanding classroom texts and literary pieces. Learners also gain practice in understanding questions, tasks and instructions formulated verbally. In this way, competencies in listening comprehension are addressed which are assumed in school contexts and which are frequently required of learners but rarely practiced.

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  • Focus Article |  from practice Multilingualism and diversity of languages
    Teaching materials for multilingual picture books from Andrea Quesel-Bedrich

    Multilingual picture books can provide access to concepts of multilingualism and language variety in the classroom and can help us both see multilingualism as a resource and integrate speakers’ first languages in lessons (Nauwerck, 2013). This can impact positively on linguistic confidence and the development of writing skills in students with a different first language (see, for example, Wiese, Tracy & Sennema 2020 & Riehl 2006). At the same time, it can have a positive effect on the linguistic reflection of all students, as they delve into languages, comparing these and gaining insights into the range of languages spoken in their class (see, for example, Oomen-Welke, 2020). The paper which follows shares a selection of teaching ideas and materials which were designed by students in German teaching seminars and which explore the use of multilingual picture books. The materials were created to open up new opportunities for teachers working with picture books. Using multilingual picture books means taking an approach to multilingual pedagogy which integrates this multilingualism in all areas of the learning of (written) language (Wildemann, 2011). It is not enough, however, to use picture books simply as a medium, but instead these must be prepared with the multiliteracies approach in the classroom in mind.

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  • Focus Article |  from practice *Pedagogical models of text genres: An additional form of teaching material? from Véronica Sánchez Abchi, Virginie Conti, Jean-François de Pietro

    * This is the German translation of the article «Les modèles didactiques de genres textuels, une forme complémentaire de matériel pédagogique?» by Verónica Sánchez Abchi, Virginie Conti et Jean-François de Pietro

    In the context of the development of a new series of coursebooks for French (the ‘MER-Français’) in western Switzerland, schemes of work known as ‘parcours’ were planned to train the comprehension and production of a variety of text genres. It was in this context that the IRDP was asked to develop pedagogical models for the chosen genres, so as to support the educational work by the team writing the new ‘MER-Français’.
    In this article we present the concept behind the pedagogical model we adopt and the principles which guide our modelling work. Further, we outline how our pedagogical models work on two levels. On the one hand, they contribute to the development process behind the suggested methodology of the MER. At the same time, once they have been published and linked with the corresponding ‘parcours’, they help to make the publication team’s representation of the object easier to understand. In this connection we suggest that the pedagogical models themselves become educational material which shapes teachers’ practice, and which can also be implemented in teacher education.

    Read the article in PDF * This text is a translation of the original article published in 3/2024 (DE)
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The association Leseforum Schweiz would like to thank the Federal Office of Culture FOC for its support.

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