Reflections
What do you observe?
Answers may include:
- Mother and baby are holding the book.
- Baby is pointing at objects in the book and turning the pages.
- Mother is saying what is on the page and baby is making sounds.
- Baby is on the mother's lap. He briefly climbs off her lap, then back on.
- The home visitor is sitting at the side.
- At one point, the baby looks at the home visitor and says something, and the home visitor says, "Kangaroo."
- The home visitor is coaching the mother about the child's language development, talking about repeating words and how children learn.
- Mother asks the baby where the kangaroo is. He turns a page, and the mother says, "Zebra."
- Baby puts the book on his head and laughs.
What does the mother do to support the child's emergent literacy?
Answers may include:
- She follows his lead, letting him do what he wants with the book, such as turning pages and putting it on his head.
- She says the words he points to rather than reading the book straight through.
- She holds him on her lap so they are experiencing physical closeness.
- Mother repeats the words more than once: "Kangaroo, kangaroo; zebra, zebra."
What does the home visitor do to support the continuation of the activity? What does she do to enhance the parent-child relationship?
Answers may include:
- She uses a positive tone.
- She describes and comments on what the parent is doing specifically rather than just saying, "Good job."
- She talks to the mother and credits her for the accomplishments of her son.
- She sits nearby but lets the mother guide the reading activity.
- The home visitor coaches the mother on some things she could try to enhance her child's speech.
What is the child learning from this experience?
Answers may include:
- Perceptual, Motor, and Physical Development
- Eye-hand coordination
- Fine motor skills (e.g., turning pages, pointing)
- Gross motor skills (e.g., climbing up and down from Mom's lap).
- Social and Emotional Development
- Self-esteem from his successes and acknowledgement from others
- Taking pleasure in his own activity and sharing it with both his mother and the home visitor
- Approaches to Learning
- Self-regulation and persistence (e.g., continuing to try to turn pages or name animals)
- Problem-solving (e.g., figuring out what animals are on the page)
- Attention (e.g., maintaining focus on and interest in the book)
- Language and Literacy
- Receptive language (e.g., listening to his mother say the words in the book and the home visitor repeating the word for the picture he is pointing to)
- Expressive language (e.g., when his mother says the words, the child tries to repeat them, making sounds throughout the clip)
- Literacy (e.g., enjoying books, turning pages, identifying objects in the book that represent other objects (animals))
- Cognition
- Learning how objects in the book represent animals he may have seen previously
- Pointing to objects (animals) and naming them
How can you enhance your home visits based on what you have observed?
Answers may include:
- Various reflections
See a home visitor demonstrating how to identify an object in the book and find the matching object on the floor. Best practice suggests the parent should read the book. Notice how the home visitor turns the book over to the mother so she can promote her child's emergent literacy.