A new framework developed by researchers influences how a child's brain is wired to learn to read before kindergarten.

‘A new screening tool featured in the model called The Reading House, which directly engages preschool-age children during clinic visits so pediatricians can assess their early literacy skills.
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This kind of model is advocated by the American Academy of Pediatrics to help better understand and improve important social determinants of health. 




"Emergent literacy is a developmental process beginning in infancy, when the brain is rapidly developing. It involves skills, knowledge, and attitudes that are precursors to reading and writing," said John Hutton, MD, director of the Reading & Literacy Discovery Center at Cincinnati Children's. "Reading difficulties stem from deficits in any of these domains and take root early with far too many children beginning kindergarten unprepared to learn to read and at-risk of falling farther behind. Our research shows this is especially true for children from minority and impoverished backgrounds."
The model is separated into three categories: 1) ecological, 2) biological and 3) developmental. Ecological includes experiences in a child's home environment, such as reading, talking, teaching, and creative play. Biological includes genetics such as family history of dyslexia and medical conditions such as prematurity. Developmental includes cognitive, social-emotional, and brain health and abilities.
"Importantly, our model anchors these factors to neurobiology, which reflects how a functional 'reading network' develops in a child's brain," Hutton said. "Through neuroimaging, especially MRI, our research has found that more stimulating reading activities in the home environment prior to kindergarten are related to better developed brain structure and also function supporting literacy."
Cincinnati Children's has several programs in place for parents help their child, both in and out of the hospital. A new program is called "NICU Bookworms," through which families receive free books and encouragement to read to their baby during their stay in intensive care, which can be days or months long. They also receive empowering guidance on the benefits of "shared" book reading by trained NICU teams. This is an important resource, as families are often anxious about what they can do to help their child.
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A new book titled Baby Bookworm, written by Dr. Hutton and neonatologist Dr. Viral Jain, MD, to reinforce the NICU Bookworms program, was recently published. It gives parents in the NICU at Cincinnati Children's and other hospitals a way to help them bond with their babies.
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The book has the potential to identify reading difficulties as early as age 3, target interventions to skills, and empower families to help their child at home.
"Rather than a passive approach, early literacy screening and interventions that are administered by pediatric practitioners through this new model can help identify potential reading difficulties, address risk factors during a period when neural plasticity is high, and improve outcomes," Hutton said.
Source-Eurekalert