Oral Language
Reading Stages
Writing Stages
Print Concepts
Family Engagement
100

Name one way families can build oral language at home.

Talking during daily routines (mealtime, car rides, shopping).

100

What is the first stage of reading development?

Emergent stage.

100

What comes after scribbling in the writing stages?

Letter-like forms.

100

What is directionality?

Reading left to right, top to bottom.

100

Give one example of a print-rich classroom environment.

Word walls, labels, anchor charts.

200

What is the foundation of literacy development?

Oral language.

200

At what stage do children use both decoding and sight words but still make error

Transitional stage.

200

Why is invented spelling valuable?

It shows phonics knowledge in action and risk-taking with sounds/letters.

200

How can teachers model spacing between words?

Use fingers between words during shared writing.

200

Give one example of a print-rich home environment.

Labeling kitchen items, family reading corner.

300

Give one predictor of early literacy that connects to oral language.

Vocabulary knowledge.

300

Which stage involves recognizing environmental print (like McDonald’s or Target signs)?

Emergent stage.

300

What is the final stage of writing development?

Conventional spelling.

300

What tells a child the book is upside down or backwards?

Print orientation concepts (cover, page order).

300

How can community spaces support literacy?

Library programs, signs, menus, environmental print.

400

How can teachers model oral language for families?

Role-play conversations, model open-ended questions, encourage storytelling.

400

In the fluent stage, what major shift happens in reading?

Focus moves from decoding to comprehension.

400

Give an example of a writing sample at the phonetic stage.

Writing “MT” for “mommy.”

400

What’s one way to teach punctuation naturally?

Point out periods, question marks, and exclamation marks during read-alouds.

400

What is one non-negotiable message families should leave with?

Reading, talking, and writing daily builds literacy — even in small moments.

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