Science and Literacy: Connecting Science, Language, and Literacy Through Books

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During the first week of a three-week shadows study, children in Yazmins preschool class explore their shadows outdoors. Yazmin encourages them to observe how their shadows look, move, and change as they run and jump. During the week, she reads books with shadow themes, including泭Moonbears Shadow, by Frank Asch. As always, she supports knowledge of print by moving her finger from left to right under the text as she reads. But she also uses the book to draw out childrens observations, descriptions, and ideas about shadows.
What do you notice about the size of Moonbears shadow in this picture? she asks. How did Moonbears shadow change? Why do you think it wont go away when he asks it to?
Over the next two weeks, Yazmin adds indoor explorations of shadows with flashlights, objects, and shadow puppets. She continues integrating books to support childrens science, language, and literacy learning simultaneously.
Science is a perfect vehicle for supporting childrens language and literacy development through books. Reading and discussing science-focused books support childrens speaking and listening skills, reading comprehension, and vocabulary development. As children read books on topics theyre actively exploring, they also have opportunities to do what scientists do: raise questions, plan explorations, gain new knowledge, and share their findings, observations, and thinking泭with others.
Our team at Education Development Center and the Connecticut Science Center partner with Yazmin (the second author) and other early childhood teachers in Connecticut to study strategies for supporting childrens language and literacy development through science. This integration of literacy across content areas is a key component of developmentally appropriate practice. Although our work focuses on children who are multilingual learners, we find that all children benefit when early childhood educators use books to support integration. Here, we offer strategies that you can use to incorporate books into a science unit and intentionally scaffold childrens science, language, and泭literacy learning.
Planning with Intention
Young children are born ready to wonder and explore as they look for the relationships and patterns that help them make sense of the world. Ongoing explorations of topics such as shadows, ramps, water, sound, colors, and living things excite and motivate them to talk, read, and write about their experiences, observations, ideas, and泭new learning.
Just like all teaching, planning for science and literacy integration must be intentional. It begins with thinking about the central concepts, or big science ideas, that will anchor and connect childrens direct explorations and book experiences. Two big ideas about shadows, for example, are that a shadow is created when an object blocks the light and that the shapes of shadows may change when the object or light source moves. (Knowing and choosing relevant big science ideas can be challenging; weve found resources like the educator site, which is free and available in English and Spanish, to泭be helpful.)
Next, decide which of the purposes for using books in science you will focus on. You might use them to create excitement about a topic of study, draw out childrens thinking related to the big ideas, help children make connections to their own experiences, and/or generate new ideas and questions for investigation. Finally, choose the direct experiences, books, and vocabulary that will be central to the unit and the sequence in which youll introduce them to support childrens science, language, and泭literacy learning.
Choosing Science-Focused Books to Support Language and Literacy Goals
Among other genres, childrens texts include storybooks, informational texts, and mixed-genre books, which have elements of both. You can use all of these to support a range of language and literacy goals, as泭outlined below.
Storybooks
In the opening vignette, Yazmin read the storybook泭Moonbears Shadow, about a bear who tries to escape from his shadow.泭During the reading, she supported childrens understanding of the word泭shadow泭and engaged them in thinking about the idea that shadows are created when an object blocks the path of light. As the shadows study progressed, Yazmin introduced children to another storybook with a character who is frightened by giant shadows:泭The Gruffalos Child, by Julia Donaldson. She used this book to nurture childrens growing understanding of shadows, their ability to share their ideas in group conversations, and their descriptive (bigger,泭smaller) and positional (in front of,泭behind,泭next泭to) vocabulary.
Informational Texts
We have found that books like these are best introduced once children have had some opportunities to explore a topic firsthand. When choosing informational books, look for texts you can use to support childrens thinking about their own observations and discoveries and to reinforce vocabulary related to the concepts theyre exploring in class. Help children interpret, evaluate, and make sense of the text and images in the book. These are key language and泭comprehension skills.
Yazmin supplemented her shadows study with泭Guess Whose Shadow?, by Stephen R. Swinburne, and泭Me and My Shadow, by Arthur Dorros. These books present concepts and vocabulary related to shadows at different levels of complexity. They also provide many opportunities for you to help children do what scientists doraise questions, plan explorations, gain knowledge, and share their findings, observations, and thinking with others. Informational texts do not have to be read cover to cover to be effective. You can also use them as research references to look up answers to childrens泭specific questions.
Mixed-Genre Books
Mixed-genre books use fictional characters to communicate information. For example, in the English and Spanish versions of泭Oscar and the Moth: A Book About Light and Dark, by Geoff Waring, a wise moth teaches a curious kitten about where light comes from, how shadows are formed, and why it gets dark at night. In this book, the main characters questions often reflect questions that children also wonder about, such as where does the sun go at night?泭The text models an ongoing conversation between the characters. In general, look for mixed-genre books that focus on phenomena children can experience and observe with their senses rather than concepts that they cannot泭experience directly.
Strategies for Reading Science-Focused Books with Children
To make the most of science-focused books, read alouds should be interactive and stimulate childrens observations and thinking about the science phenomena theyre exploring. Based on researchincluding our own work with preschool teacherswe recommend you use the following strategies to help build childrens emerging understanding of science concepts; their ability to ask questions, consider other perspectives, make inferences, and identify relationships; and their comprehension and vocabulary skills. (See Strategies in Action at the end of this article for examples of how Yazmin used these strategies in her泭shadows study.)
- Introduce explorations and books with an intentional message.泭An泭intentional message泭sets the stage for upcoming activities, ties childrens science and literacy experiences together, and supports comprehension and vocabulary learning. In our work, we use intentional messages beginning with the sentence stem We can explore泭to introduce related science explorations and book readings. This is an especially important strategy to use with multilingual learners because it clues them in to the upcoming activity and what泭to expect.
- Use props to bring the images and words in the book to life.泭Using concrete objects to demonstrate the actions and ideas described in the book supports childrens comprehension and vocabulary by helping them connect the information conveyed in the text to their own experiences, observations, and ideas. Inviting children to demonstrate or role-play as you read further supports these泭conceptual connections.
- Encourage children to closely observe and describe images in books.泭Talking with children about the images in a science-focused book helps them understand that images play a role in transmitting information. For example, focusing on photographs or scientifically accurate drawings in an informational text helps children interpret the images and understand that these graphics convey key information. When reading a storybook, you can help children evaluate the images for scientific accuracy by comparing them to what theyve observed in their own explorations. These images can also be used to help children make inferences about how a character feels and behaves as they do泭and why.
- Focus on vocabulary words and their meanings.泭Identify a set of target vocabulary words that are responsive to your groups current vocabulary levels, and use read alouds as opportunities to discuss and deepen childrens understanding of word meanings. Use a balance of science-related words (such as泭observe,泭describe, and泭compare) and rich, complex everyday words related to the topic. Try displaying words in both English and childrens home languages, and introduce more complex words as a science泭study progresses.
With intentional and thoughtful planning, you can connect childrens science, language, and literacy experiences, helping them to become knowledgeable thinkers, communicators, and readers. To get started, consider the following questions you might ask after a泭read aloud:
- What do you think the author was trying to tell us/teach泭us about?
- How was what we read similar to what we observed in our own explorations? How was泭it different?
- What did we read about that you would like to learn泭more about?
This work is supported by the泭National Science Foundation泭Grant DRL 1949266. Any opinions,泭findings, and conclusions or泭recommendations are those of泭the author(s) and do not泭necessarily reflect the views of泭the NSF.
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Photograph:泭courtesy of the author
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Cindy Hoisington is an early childhood and elementary science specialist泭and a project director at泭.
Yazmin C籀lon Diaz泭is a preschool teacher at Hartford Neighborhood Center in Hartford, Connecticut.