Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
Each teacher holding an early childhood education endorsement
shall possess the knowledge and skills articulated in this Section.
a) Foundational Knowledge
1) Language
The effective early childhood education teacher:
A) applies major theories, stages, and
processes of first and second language acquisition, in particular understanding
the importance of social interaction, culture, play, emergence of social
discourse, and the relationship between first and second language development
during the early years;
B) applies
the nature, development, and communicative role of various features of
language, including the four cuing systems of graphophonemic, syntactic,
semantic and pragmatic, in the language experiences of children;
C) demonstrates the importance of play as the
cognitive and social basis for the development of phonemic, semantic, and
pragmatic knowledge across languages in young children;
D) supports the role of the home (the first)
language in learning to read and write in a second language;
E) applies the theories, principles, and
practices of emergent literacy, including the development of speaking and
listening and their relationship to the developmental process of reading and
writing acquisition;
F) recognizes
the sequence of stages in language, reading, and writing development from birth
through grade 2 using supporting evidence from theory and research, and
acknowledges individual differences among children progressing through those
stages. Applies understanding of the particularities of these processes for
children whose first language is other than English;
G) utilizes social discourse in developing
critical thinking, argumentation and analysis;
H) acknowledges the role of fine motor
development in children's emergent literacy, specifically the ability to form
letters and words through a variety of media;
I) provides experiences with content-specific
vocabulary and decontextualized language that develop children's understanding
of concepts, content, skills and processes;
J) applies understanding of the relationship
between first and second language content-specific vocabulary for children
whose first language is other than English;
K) provides experiences explicitly designed
to facilitate the acquisition of academic decontextualized language and English
vocabulary for children whose first language is not English;
L) models and supports children's use of
conventions of grammar and language of wider communication; and
M) supports bilingual children's awareness of
differences and commonalities between the conventions of grammar and language
of English and that of the home language.
2) Alphabetic Code
The effective early childhood teacher:
A) models and supports the development of
phonological awareness (recognition of phonemes and the sound structure of
words, including rhyming words; initial, middle, and ending sounds; syllables;
and onsets and rimes) and its relationship to reading and writing
proficiency;
B) supports children's
developing understanding of the orthographic-phonological system, including
sound-letter relationships and common English spelling patterns and their
relationship to pronunciation and developmental spelling;
C) supports bilingual children's awareness of
the differences and commonalities between the orthographic-phonological systems
of English and the home language; and
D) supports structural analysis (e.g.,
syllabication, affixes, root words) for decoding unknown words in language
experiences for children.
3) Text
The effective early childhood teacher:
A) supports the development of narratives in
young children's spoken language and understanding of narrative
structure;
B) supports the
development of text awareness and emergent reading behaviors in young children,
including concepts of print, book knowledge, and narrative structure evidenced
in picture reading, story-telling, and retelling of the story;
C) uses "read-alouds" and shared reading
experiences to support emerging language and literacy, and ongoing literacy
development;
D) acknowledges and
uses the quantitative, qualitative, and individual factors that affect text
complexity, including how to estimate developmentally appropriate levels of
text;
E) uses texts that engage
children with the organizational structures, literary devices, rhetorical
features, text features, and graphics commonly used in literary and
informational texts;
F) uses texts
that engage children with the characteristics of various genre or forms of
literary and informational text;
G)
uses a variety of textual and authentic resources that promote differentiated
instruction that meets the needs of all learners;
H) understands the role, perspective, and
purpose of text in all content areas; and
I) supports the transference of text
competencies from the home language to English for bilingual
children.
b)
The Language and Literacy Curriculum
The effective early childhood teacher:
1) understands and uses developmentally
appropriate and evidence-based practices to plan, evaluate and modify
instruction (e.g., use of appropriate research in identifying and implementing
effective instructional practices);
2) knows the developmental sequence of
language acquisition and emergent literacy strategies and skills, along with
age-level or grade-level benchmarks of development, and utilizes them in
classroom practice;
3) demonstrates
the understanding that language is acquired through social interaction and that
social discourse, in spoken and written formats, underlies all learning in
literacy;
4) incorporates the
Illinois Early Learning and Development Standards - Children Age 3 to
Kindergarten Enrollment Age set forth in 23 Ill. Adm. Code 235.Appendix A, the
Illinois Early Learning Guidelines - Children from Birth to Age 3 set forth in
23 Ill. Adm. Code 235.Appendix C, and the Illinois Learning Standards for
English Language Arts and Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and
Technical Subjects set forth in 23 Ill. Adm. Code 1.Appendix D, including their
organization and progressions and the interconnections among the strategies and
skills;
5) evaluates the components
of a comprehensive curriculum that develops children's language and literacy
skills and strategies, and ensures that instructional goals and objectives are
met;
6) creates a developmentally
appropriate language- and literacy-rich classroom environment that incorporates
opportunities, experiences, routines, and activities that promote
literacy;
7) intentionally engages
children in experiences that will build foundational literacy skills;
8) understands and uses evidence-based
instructional strategies that have been demonstrated to be particularly
successful in differentiating instruction for all learners;
9) builds upon children's skills in their
home language to develop language and literacy skills that are transferable to
English;
10) understands and uses
the relationship between first and second language and literacy development to
support the transfer of language and literacy skills from the home language to
English; and
11) utilizes a wide
range of developmentally appropriate literacy assessments (e.g., informal,
observational, performance-based, standardized, diagnostic measures, universal
screening, curriculum-based, and progress monitoring), recognizing their
purposes, strengths, and limitations.
c) Using Research-based Instructional
Approaches
1) Current Research
The effective early childhood teacher:
A) critically reviews current research in
English language arts; and
B)
applies research to instructional practice as appropriate.
2) Decoding and Fluency
The effective early childhood teacher:
A) uses a developmentally appropriate,
balanced literacy framework, such as "read-alouds", guided reading, centers,
and independent reading and writing;
B) systematically and intentionally engages
children with authentic functions of print to develop awareness and build
understanding of concepts of print and text, including the use of illustrations
and graphic representations; the use and understanding of graphemes and
grapheme patterns; and understanding directionality of print in a wide variety
of graphic and textual formats;
C)
intentionally and systematically engages and supports children in developing
the use of oral language, play, and experimentation with language;
D) utilizes phonologically significant text
to build children's knowledge and understanding of the phonological aspects of
language, including the patterns of sounds and segmentation in and blending of
speech at the word, syllable, and phoneme levels;
E) engages children in textual experiences
that provide opportunities for exploration of sound-symbol relationships at the
word, syllable, and phoneme levels;
F) intentionally and systematically engages
children in textual experiences that provide opportunities for exploration and
for embedded implicit and explicit instruction of varied and appropriate word
identification strategies, including sight word recognition, phonics, and
context and morphemic cues;
G)
models and supports fluent language use in dialogue and in numerous and varied
print sources and encourages children's developing use of fluent oral
language;
H) provides intentional
instruction of strategies that support the development of fluency, such as
recognition of word and letter patterns, use of high frequency words, and
development of reading comprehension; and
I) intentionally supports the transfer of
literacy competencies from the first to the second language for English
learners, particularly in regards to functions of print (e.g., understanding
the concepts of print and text, use of illustrations and graphic
representations, use of oral language, play and experimentation with language,
and sound-symbol relationships).
3) Reading Comprehension
The effective early childhood teacher:
A) selects a balance of developmentally
appropriate, high-quality, complex information and narrative texts that match
children's interests, cultural backgrounds, developmental levels, and reading
purposes;
B) recognizes text
features that may challenge readers' understanding (e.g., prior knowledge
assumptions, unfamiliar vocabulary, sentence complexity, unclear cohesive
links, subtlety of relationships among characters or ideas, sophistication of
tone, complexity of text structure, literary devices, or data) and provides
explicit modeling, instruction, and discussion of these features to support
reading comprehension;
C) selects
texts that support and build comprehension, vocabulary, understanding of text
structure and literary devices and that provide clear and cohesive links
between ideas and relationships. Illustrations, photographs, charts, and graphs
should meet the same criteria;
D)
models for and engages children in social discourse about texts as a means of
scaffolding their understanding of more complex texts;
E) provides text-appropriate supports, such
as background experiences, previewing text, pre-teaching vocabulary or key
information, repeated reading, discussing illustrations or other graphic
features, and other strategies to enable children to understand and learn from
challenging text;
F) provides
developmentally appropriate introductions to text, including materials,
experiences, discussion, and background connections that support children's
motivation, purpose, and understanding;
G) provides developmentally appropriate
modeling of and instruction on close reading of text, including identification
of key ideas and details; analysis of craft, structure and illustrations;
critical text evaluation; and numerous opportunities for guided and independent
practice;
H) models and engages
children in the interpretation of graphic text features (e.g., tables, charts,
illustrations, tables of contents, captions, headings, indexes) and includes
numerous opportunities for guided and independent practice;
I) models for and engages children in
developmentally appropriate guided and independent discussions of high-level,
text-dependent topics and ideas requiring complex thinking, understanding,
inference, application, evaluation, analysis, synthesis, persuasion, and
evidentiary argument;
J) models for
and engages children in developmentally appropriate independent practice of
comparing multiple texts and evaluating and synthesizing information between
and across texts to support coherent understanding of a topic;
K) models for and engages children in the use
of developmentally appropriate reading comprehension strategies (e.g.,
predicting, sequencing, connecting, visualizing, monitoring, questioning,
summarizing, synthesizing, making inferences, evaluating), and includes
numerous opportunities for guided and independent practice of these strategies'
use in understanding text;
L)
models, discusses, and supports children's developmentally appropriate use of
literary elements and text features across multiple genres and disciplines in
age-appropriate text;
M) shares
varied print sources, discussing, as appropriate, alternate views and
perspectives of topics presented in texts;
N) models, discusses, and supports children's
use of critical reading strategies, including the evaluation of text claims
through identification of supporting evidence, such as evidentiary argument and
persuasion;
O) shares varied print
sources, discussing, as appropriate, text structures that support children's
understanding of the text;
P)
provides intentional modeling of and instruction on the use of the
organizational structure of texts, including how specific sentences, paragraphs
and larger portions of the text relate to each other and the whole, and offers
numerous opportunities for guided and independent practice; and
Q) intentionally plans experiences for
English learners that facilitate the transfer of effective reading
comprehension strategies and competencies from the home language to
English.
4) Writing
The effective early childhood teacher:
A) introduces children to the organization
and basic features of print;
B)
provides opportunities for children to write, including pictures and dictation,
for authentic purposes in multiple forms and genres to demonstrate how ideas,
thoughts, and language can be represented by pictures or texts;
C) engages children in using drawing and
writing to develop an understanding of content-area concepts and
skills;
D) encourages and guides
children in all stages of writing development from the earliest scribbles
through conventional writing;
E)
models and provides instruction in producing coherent and clear writing with
organization, development, substance, and style appropriate to the task,
purpose and audience;
F) confers
with children to motivate and scaffold children's development throughout the
writing process;
G) models and
provides instruction in creating a text (oral or written) that represents
information learned through a hands-on experience;
H) introduces and provides instruction in
creating an informative and explanatory text that introduces a topic supported
by logically ordered facts, definitions, details, examples, quotations, and
other types of information; uses precise language, academic vocabulary, and
appropriate transitional devices; and concludes with a statement related to the
topic;
I) models and provides
instruction in creating a text (oral or written) with a beginning, middle, and
end, based on real or imagined experiences or events;
J) introduces and provides instruction in
creating a narrative text based on real or imagined experiences or events that
introduces a narrator or characters; uses dialogue, description, and pacing to
develop and organize a sequence of events; uses concrete words, phrases,
sensory details, and transitional devices; and uses a conclusion that follows
from the experiences or events;
K)
models and provides instruction in creating a text (oral or written) that
shares an opinion about a hands-on experience;
L) provides instruction in creating a text
that introduces an opinion on a topic, supports the opinion with information
and reasons based on facts and details, uses appropriate transitional devices,
and concludes with a statement supporting the opinion;
M) models and provides instruction in
developing written and oral arguments to support claims in an analysis of
substantive topics or texts using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient
evidence;
N) teaches children to
conduct research projects, as developmentally appropriate, using evidence drawn
from multiple sources, including how to select and develop topics; gather
information from a variety of sources, including the Internet; synthesize
information; and paraphrase, summarize, and quote and cite sources;
O) models and provides instruction in the
conventions of standard English grammar and usage (e.g., irregular verbs,
plural nouns, past tense of irregular verbs, subject-verb agreement,
pronoun-antecedent agreement, conjunctions, prepositions, interjections,
perfect verb tenses) in children's oral and written work;
P) models, encourages, and guides the use of
widely accepted English conventions of capitalization, punctuation, and
spelling as children use these conventions in creating written work;
Q) models and provides instruction in using
technology to produce and publish oral and written texts and to interact and
collaborate with others;
R)
provides feedback to written work to guide the process of children's revising
and editing their work; and
S)
intentionally plans experiences for English learners that facilitate the
transfer of effective writing strategies and competencies from the home
language to English.
5)
Speaking and Listening
The effective early childhood teacher:
A) provides opportunities for social
discourse between individual children and in whole and small group
collaborative discussions and assists them in following appropriate social
conventions, such as eye contact, body language, and taking turns;
B) engages children in a variety of
developmentally appropriate oral language and listening activities, including
following directions, asking and responding to questions, conveying information
and ideas, describing feelings, and arguing and persuading;
C) engages children in a variety of listening
activities, including identifying rhymes and sounds in the environment,
discriminating phonemes and conducting other phonemic awareness
activities;
D) models and supports
children in listening actively and critically in order to understand, evaluate,
and respond to a speaker's message;
E) models, guides, and instructs children in
presenting ideas, opinions, and information using facts and relevant details to
support main ideas;
F) accepts
children's home language and developing English language skills while modeling
the widely accepted conventions of English grammar and usage; and
G) intentionally plans experiences for
English learners that facilitate the transfer of speaking and listening
strategies and competencies from the home language to English.
6) Vocabulary
The effective early childhood teacher:
A) supports vocabulary development daily by
intentionally selecting literacy materials that expand children's knowledge and
language development;
B) guides and
supports children's explorations of word relationships and nuances in word
meanings;
C) understands the
socio-cultural context for language use and social discourse;
D) uses information about children's
individual experiences, families, cultures, and communities to create
meaningful vocabulary learning opportunities and enrich instruction for all
children;
E) for the instructional
focus, selects appropriate words central to the meaning of the text and likely
to be unknown, academic vocabulary and word relationships;
F) introduces children to word play and forms
of language that enhance vocabulary and understanding of language (e.g., poetic
devices, synonyms, antonyms, homonyms);
G) introduces strategies for clarifying the
meaning of unknown words, including contextual analysis, structural analysis,
and the use of reference materials;
H) plans experiences that promote oral and
written language development and the use of newly acquired vocabulary across
disciplines;
I) understands and
implements the forms and functions of academic language to help children
develop and express content understandings;
J) utilizes authentic text (e.g.,
informational text, fiction, newspapers, recipes, charts) to help children
develop word consciousness;
K)
actively engages children in using a wide variety of strategies and authentic
materials for developing and expanding vocabularies; and
L) uses home language vocabulary to develop
and expand English vocabulary for English learners.
d) Authentic Materials
The effective early childhood teacher:
1) selects and uses a wide range of
high-quality, diverse literature and informational, narrative, and other texts
that address the interests and social and cultural backgrounds of children at
levels that are appropriate to their development and build background knowledge
and understanding;
2) uses
evidence-based and developmentally based criteria for evaluating and selecting
texts and instructional materials;
3) estimates the accessibility of texts using
qualitative and quantitative factors, as well as children's background
knowledge;
4) uses culturally
responsive texts to promote children's understanding of their lives, society,
and other cultures and societies;
5) uses a variety of technology and
technologically based texts and online resources to support literacy
instruction; and
6) makes available
to English learners a wide range of high-quality, diverse literature and
informational, narrative, and other texts that address the interests and
social, cultural, and language backgrounds of these children at levels that are
appropriate to their development and build background knowledge and
understanding.
e)
Constructing a Supportive Language and Literacy Environment
The effective early childhood teacher:
1) understands the foundational role that
literacy and language play across the classroom environment and in content
areas;
2) sets up an environment
that is safe and low risk that encourages children and allows them to be
comfortable taking risks;
3)
designs a literacy-rich environment incorporating authentic, diverse,
inclusive, and developmentally appropriate materials and experiences;
4) understands motivation and engagement and
the use of the "gradual-release-of-responsibility" approach to design learning
experiences that build children's self-direction and ownership of literacy
learning;
5) establishes classroom
routines that promote independence, self-direction, collaboration, and
responsibility for literacy learning;
6) uses a strategic combination of flexible
groupings (individual, group, and whole class) to meet the learning needs of
each child efficiently and effectively;
7) incorporates children's choices in
choosing literacy materials and activities; and
8) builds collaborative classroom communities
that support and engage all children in reading, writing, listening, speaking,
viewing, and visually representing in their home language and
English.