A presentation by Jan Townend, a member of our online e-Consultancy Team and a speech and language therapist, and specialist teacher in dyslexia and literacy, currently working on a project Talk to your Baby in Tanzania.
Dyslexia International May 2012 Newsletter.
www.dyslexia-international.org
3. Improving early language
development leads to
Bigger vocabulary
Better sentence construction
Earlier reading and writing readiness
Readiness for learning other languages
Enhanced cognitive potential
but, are babies in Tanzania getting a good enough
early language experience?
4. Encouragements and Challenges
‘Are you sure Tanzanian mothers don’t talk to
their babies?
‘Of course mothers interact with their babies…’
‘That makes complete sense to me…’
‘Go for it!’
and finally, from MoEVT “Let’s do it”
Many meetings followed.....
5.
6. We went to the field
We piloted the attitude questionnaire
We taught a lesson to Standard 5, about
the importance of talking to babies
We talked to groups of mothers in village
churches
7.
8.
9.
10. Now the project looks like
this
Key activities (to be completed):
Community-based research
Focus on community reach for intervention
Incorporation of learning into existing early
childhood development (ECD) provision
Incorporation in curricula (primary, adult &
training of relevant professionals)
Training of trainers
Learning packs for self-study
Information campaign
11. Partner organisations (so
far): Inter-ministerial Task Force (3 ministries)
UDOM
WAMA
Children in Crossfire
VSO
TECDEN
Monduli Pastoralist Development Initiative
+ UDSM, UWEZO, World Bank, Save the Children,
TAWREF, CSWD (Mafia) are getting involved
12. What the stakeholders are
doing now
Shifting ownership from volunteers to Tanzanian
stakeholders.
Expressing their strong desire to bring about
behaviour change, starting now.
Distributing responsibilities between
stakeholders.
Following up their commitment to using existing
routes
Focusing on rural poor, as the most needy group
Making progress on the key activities
15. Nobel prize winning economist
and child development expert,
James Heckman, wrote
recently:
“Skill formation starts in the
womb. The early years of a child’s
life before the child enters school
lay the foundations for all that
follows”
16.
17. Neural connections for
language (Harvard
University) Are established mostly in the first
year
Depend upon a good language
environment
Question: How many words do you
think an infant in Tanzania
typically hears at home in one
hour?
19. Literacy acquisition
depends on language
levels at 24 months
(Blanden, 2006)
Academic success
correlates very highly
with size of vocabulary
at age 5 (Roulstone et al.,
2011)
20. International researchers
agree that:
Language skill is central to intellectual
and social development in children (Cain
& Oakhill, 2007)
Some say it is the most important factor
(Harvard University)
Language development is most active in
the first year of life (Ryan & Deci, 2000)
Early language experience is the most
important experience for children to
achieve their potential (Sylva et al., 2008)
22. Cost to benefit ratio of
interventions in early education
Is highest in the first three years
(Doyle et al., 2007)
This is before the start of formal
education (Heckman, 2011)
27. The rich win on
Better school readiness
Larger vocabulary
Fewer behaviour problems
This is why Zungumza na Mtoto
Mchanga must target the
disadvantaged. In Tanzania,
that means the rural poor.
28. What do we already know in
Tanzania?
Anecdotal & observation evidence so far:
Little verbal interaction between parents and
babies
Parents do not expect babies to need /
understand language
Hardly anyone knows of the importance of
early language
29. There is now a need for:
Baseline research to establish present
language experience of babies
Attitude survey to establish current
beliefs & practice about language &
babies
Investigation of the effectiveness of
capacity building among families
Reporting of the findings
30. References Harvard University Centre on the Developing Child. ‘In Brief: the science of
early childhood development’. www.developingchild.harvard.edu . 2007.
Blanden, J. ‘Bucking the trend – what enables those who are disadvantaged in
childhood to succeed later in life?’. 2006. Cited in DfE/DoH ‘Supporting
families in the foundation years’. London, UK: HMSO, 2011.
Roulstone, S.et al. ‘The role of language in children’s early educational
outcomes’. London, UK: DfE, 2011.
Cain, K. And Oakhill, J. ‘Children’s comprehension problems in oral and written
language’. Guilford Press, 2007.
Harvard University Centre on the Developing Child. ‘In Brief: the science of
early childhood development’. www.developingchild.harvard.edu . 2007.
Ryan, R. and Deci, E. ‘Intrinsic and extrinsic motivations: classic definitions
and new directions’. Journal of Contemporary Educational Psychology, vol.
25, pp. 54-67. 2000.
Sylva, K. et al. ‘Effective pre-school and primary education 3-11 project: pre-
school, school and family influences on children’s development during Key
Stage 2 (age 7-11)’. 2008. Cited in DfE/DoH ‘Supporting families in the
foundation years’. London, UK: HMSO, 2011.
Taylor, M. ‘The politics of parenting’. In Brack, D. et al. ‘Re-inventing the state:
social liberalism for the 21st
Century’. 2007.
Doyle, O. et al. ‘Early childhood intervention: rationale, timing and efficacy’.
2007.
Heckman, J. ‘The American family in black and white: a post-racial strategy for
improving skills to promote equality’, 2011.