Why You Should Focus on Preschool Language Skills for Later Academic Success
April 6, 2018
5 min. read
Preschoolers need to learn to use language for three broad purposes to communicate with others in daily living situations (casual talk), to think critically and learn about the world (academic talk), and to control their own goal-directed behavior (executive functions).1,2,3 In language intervention, speech-language pathologists have long focused on casual talk, but research now shows that the second two broad functions of language, academic talk and executive functions, are essential to introduce during the preschool years to help ensure that children reach their future academic potential.
To begin adding academic talk and executive functions to preschool language intervention, we need to knowwhy these skills are important. In order to accurately focus our assessments and interventions, we need to knowwhatthe specific sub-skills are that make up academic language and executive functions. We also need to knowhowto most effectively teach these skills. Once armed with this knowledge, we can seamlessly integrate these skills into the many things we are already doing with the preschoolers we work with. For a closer look at the why, what, and how of preschool oral language foundations for later academic success,start my five part Medbridge series.
Understand the Research
Weve known for a long time that language skills are the most important part of the school readiness skills, but recent researchrevealsthe specificskills needed in order to help lay critical preschool language foundations for later academic success. Learn more about what we mean by academic talk and executive functions, and the importance of adding these areas to preschool language intervention with part one in my preschool language series, Academic Talk and Executive Functions.
Take Sub-skills into Account
When approaching assessment and intervention for academic talk and executive functions, its important to understand the details of what is involved in each of these umbrella terms. Academic talk has two dimensions with several subareas that are differentiated from everyday casual talk. The two dimensions are socialand cognitive:
Social
More autonomy
Verbal display
Group topic participation
Formality
Cognition
More information about categories of things
Precise concepts/related vocabulary
Logical/inferential reasoning
Meta-linguistic and meta-cognitive skills
Expressions of confidence in information
Talking about abstract ideas (not supported by physical or social context)
Executive function skills also have two dimensions, those that are considered more emotionalsuch as emotional self-regulation, and theory of mind.Other executive function skills are considered more cognitive, likecognitive flexibility, inhibition, and working memory. Understanding the definition of each of the subareas provides a direct window for easily informally assessing them.
Take your understanding a step further with part two of my series, Preschool Language Part Two: Assessment and Intervention.
Rethink Language Assessment
The good news is that we already have many assessments that are widely used and can be reinterpreted for their ability to distinguish between a childs abilities with casual talk versus academic talk. Research supports the conclusion that language sample analyses of conversation tap preschoolers skill with casual talk, whereas formal tests and story retells tap skill with academic talk.4 Indeed, formal language tests often over-identify language impairment in culturally and linguistically diverse preschoolers because they often have weak academic talk skills, but they are not language-impaired because their casual talk skills are just fine.
Continue to refine your thinking about language assessment as it relates to the casual talk and academic talk registers with my third course, Preschool Language Part Three: Rethinking Language Assessment Tools.
Incorporate Language Teaching Principles
Beyond teaching executive functions and academic talk, there are useful general language teaching principles and procedures for addressing a variety of language and learning targets. We can split these up into macro and micro variable strategies. Macro variables include organizational level structures, context, location, activities and materials, which person provides the intervention, and topics of talk. Micro variables include those related to positive emotional support, contextual support, interactional support, and adult language use.
See these language teaching principles come alive with many concrete examples in part four of my preschool language series, Language Teaching Procedures.
Connect the Dots
Effective interventions incorporating academic talk and executive function can connect regular and special education services with the language pathologist.In this position, SLPs can support preschool teachers in the classroom and in small-group pull-out programs for children who are struggling in the classroom but may not need special education services (these are often called Tier 2 interventions). We have developed just such a language and literacy preschool curriculum using published storybooks for preschoolers that has now been used in 35 classrooms.
In the fifth course of my preschool language series, you can explore how this intervention was created, what the components of it are, and examples of the kinds of lessons it employs.
Gain More Insights with Medbridge Speech Pathology Courses
For additional insights and techniques you can apply today, explore the Medbridge catalog of over 800speech pathology coursesspanning specialties and settings. Motivate clients and advance your career with expert-led online SLPCEUcourses featuring interactive demonstrations that include real patients and up-to-date, evidence-based strategies.
Below, watch Anne van Kleeck discuss the importance of introducing preschoolers to academic talk and executive functions in a short clip from the first course in her Preschool Language series, Academic Talk and Executive Functions.