Print-Rich Classrooms
The Language Arts Center
Planning for Centers
Family Home Connections
Vocabulary
100

To expose children to meaningful environmental print and support early literacy development.

What is one purpose of creating a print-rich classroom?

100

To provide children with opportunities for reading, writing, listening, and speaking.

What is the primary purpose of a Language Arts Center?

100

It ensures that each center supports specific learning objectives.

Why is intentional planning important for learning centers?

100

They support consistent learning between home and school.

They support consistent learning between home and school.

100

Words a child understands when heard

What is receptive vocabulary?

200

Labels on shelves, signs, charts, schedules, class rules.

Name one example of environmental print used in early childhood classrooms.

200

Books, writing tools, puppets, alphabet stamps, listening station.

Name one material typically found in a Language Arts Center.

200

Reduces chaos and increases student engagement.

What is one benefit of well-planned centers for classroom behavior?

200

Read aloud, label household items, storytelling.

Name one at-home literacy activity families can do.

200

Words a child can say or use

What is expressive vocabulary?

300

It helps them make connections between spoken and written language.

How does a print-rich environment support emergent readers?

300

Provide picture clues, model vocabulary, and use gestures.

How can teachers differentiate phonological awareness activities for ELL students?

300

Clear directions, visual supports, and hands-on activities.

According to Chapter 16, what should guides and tasks in centers include?

300

Provide translated materials and bilingual communication.

How can schools support families of ELL students?

300

Using real objects, pictures, and repeated exposure.

What is one effective strategy to teach vocabulary?

400

Adding pictures with vocabulary words, dual-language labels, or visual supports.

What adaptation can support ELL students in print-rich classrooms?

400

It encourages emergent writing and fine motor development.

Why is providing daily access to writing materials important?

400

Providing visual step cards or task analysis.

What planning technique helps SWD or ELL students succeed in centers?

400

Inviting families to share stories from their home cultures.

What is one example of a culturally responsive family literacy practice?

400

Use visuals, gestures, and simplified language.

How can teachers support ELL students developing vocabulary?

500

Visual schedules, color-coded labels, simplified print with symbols.

Which component of a print-rich classroom most directly supports SWD students?

500

Using adapted books, tactile letters, or simplified text.

What is one strategy to support SWD in the Language Arts Center?

500

To maintain student motivation and align with instructional themes.

Why should centers be rotated or updated regularly?

500

Providing step-by-step home literacy guides or visuals.

What strategy supports SWD families with literacy routines?

500

It builds background knowledge and supports comprehension

Why is explicit vocabulary instruction essential for SWD?