4 Building Blocks of Great Literacy Centers in Inclusive Classrooms - Brookes Blog

4 Building Blocks of Great Literacy Centers in Inclusive Classrooms

December 12, 2017

How can you support literacy skills for all learners in an inclusive early childhood classroom? The Building Blocks framework can help, and today’s post gives you some practical tips that show how.

Building Blocks is a framework developed by Susan Sandall, & Ilene Schwartz and outlined in their book, Building Blocks for Teaching Preschoolers with Special Needs. Here’s a simple visual depiction of it:

The foundation of the framework is a high-quality program for all learners. The other “building blocks”—curriculum modifications, embedded learning opportunities, and child-focused instructional strategies—are practices that may help children with more support needs meet their learning objectives.

Start by building a high-quality early childhood literacy environment

Your classroom’s literacy centers should be fun, exciting, and comfortable places for all young learners to spend time. Here are some guidelines for establishing a high-quality literacy environment for your young students. How many of them do you already do in your classroom?

Support students with curriculum modifications

To fully include children with disabilities in your classroom and enhance their participation, use curriculum modifications—changes made to your ongoing classroom activities or materials to meet the needs of diverse learners. Here are some examples of modifications you can try in your literacy centers.

Look for embedded learning opportunities

You can boost children’s learning by embedding planned opportunities for teaching and learning within your typical classroom activities and routines. With these embedded learning opportunities (ELOs), you look for opportunities to conduct short, systematic instructional interactions that use children’s natural interests and help them work toward their learning objectives. Here are some examples of ELOs.

Use explicit child-focused instructional strategies

Sometimes, a child will need more explicit instruction than you can give them through modifications or ELOs. That’s when to use child-focused instructional strategies (CFIS)—learning opportunities that are matched to a child’s individual objectives. Using CFIS, you can provide planned, consistent, systematic instruction to teach a child specific skills or behaviors. Here are a few examples of how you might use CFIS in your literacy centers.

The foundation for future reading success starts when children are young—and the diverse learners in your classroom will need a variety of meaningful, developmentally appropriate experiences and supports to build their skills. Use the suggestions in this post as a starting point, and check out these resources for more early literacy boosters:

Building Blocks for Teaching Preschoolers with Special Needs, Third Edition

The new edition is here! Expanded with timely new content and consistent with DEC Recommended Practices, the third edition of this bestselling book will fully prepare a new generation of early childhood educators to teach and include every child.

Story Friends is a fun and effective language intervention program for 4- to 6-year-old children at risk for reading difficulties. Through 26 interactive animal-themed storybooks and engaging audio recordings, Story Friends improves oral language and vocabulary development—two of the most important predictors of later reading success.

ABC Foundations for Young Children is a playful, engaging curriculum supplement giving you 56 activity-based lessons that help children recognize and write each letter in both upper- and lowercase forms and know the primary sound each letter represents.

Road to the Code is ideal for giving extra help to kindergartners and first graders who are having difficulty with their early literacy skills, and is a popular 11-week program for teaching phonemic awareness and letter-sound correspondence.