Early Childhood Symposium 2024: The Impact of a Diverse Classroom Library on Reading Outcomes (CTLE 1.5)

Wed, May 29 2024
4:30 pm – 6:00 pm
Virtual

CTLE early literacy educators


Join us for the Sixth Annual Early Childhood Symposium at Brooklyn Public Library. This year, we will explore Early Literacy and the Science of Reading in a series of three workshops offering 1.5 free CTLE credits each to NYS-certified educators.

What do young children need in the early years to be successful readers when they start learning to read? The science of reading (SOR) is a collection of five decades of international, interdisciplinary research. That research led to guidelines for supporting what’s essential and works best in reading instruction. It is most helpful in assessing how children learn to read and write, why some have difficulty, and how to intervene. The theories, studies, and frameworks within SOR can provide a basis for reading instruction, but it isn’t a curriculum or a reading program. And, as the name suggests, it is science and it will evolve as research unfolds. In this series, educators will learn from researchers, practitioners, and educators how to best support young children's foundational early literacy skills in the early years. 

 

 

 

The Early Childhood Symposium is supported by the City's First Readers initiative of the NY City Council. 

Add to My Calendar 05/29/2024 04:30 pm 05/29/2024 06:00 pm America/New_York Early Childhood Symposium 2024: The Impact of a Diverse Classroom Library on Reading Outcomes (CTLE 1.5)

Join us for the Sixth Annual Early Childhood Symposium at Brooklyn Public Library. This year, we will explore Early Literacy and the Science of Reading in a series of three workshops offering 1.5 free CTLE credits each to NYS-certified educators.

What do young children need in the early years to be successful readers when they start learning to read? The science of reading (SOR) is a collection of five decades of international, interdisciplinary research. That research led to guidelines for supporting what’s essential and works best in reading instruction. It is most helpful in assessing how children learn to read and write, why some have difficulty, and how to intervene. The theories, studies, and frameworks within SOR can provide a basis for reading instruction, but it isn’t a curriculum or a reading program. And, as the name suggests, it is science and it will evolve as research unfolds. In this series, educators will learn from researchers, practitioners, and educators how to best support young children's foundational early literacy skills in the early years. 

 

 

 

Brooklyn Public Library - Virtual MM/DD/YYYY 60

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