Abstract

This study focuses on how teachers in Swedish preschool classes describe their work to promote children’s early writing. The research questions are the following: According to teachers, in what daily activities are children given the opportunity to write? How do teachers describe their support for children’s writing processes? The empirical data was collected from interviews with twelve teachers working in preschool classes in seven different Swedish municipalities. The result shows that preschool class teachers express how they work to promote both individual and group writing. It reveals two different approaches regarding guiding children to develop their writing skills. First approach puts emphasis on working to develop creative and functional writing based on the child’s own interests, life experiences and level of knowledge. The second approach is primarily characterised by working on technical abilities; forming letters of the alphabet and developing the child’s phonological awareness. It was also found that there are teachers who use both approaches in their teaching. Teachers utilise various support strategies to develop children’s writing skills. These encompass everything from individual and group activities to the use of various artefacts in the teaching environment. The support that teachers offer children might be divided into high-level and low-level support.

Highlights

  • The second approach that emerges from the analysis involves the teacher primarily focusing on technical abilities, such as spelling, pronunciation and phonological awareness.The analysis shows that the majority of the teachers interviewed work with the alphabet, but in different ways: We go through the alphabet

  • The analysis shows that all preschool class teachers work with language games in their teaching to develop children’s phonological awareness, but that they use them in varying degrees

  • Joint writing The analysis shows that the work of teachers during group writing activities is characterised by modelling, for example, when the class have circle time and work thematically in the fields of nature, technology and society

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Summary

Introduction

Some children recognise letters and are able to read and write before they begin primary school, while others require more support and structured teaching.The early stimulation of children’s literacy and the opportunity to explore literature in a meaningful context, as well as through structured teaching, play an important role in the progress of their future literacy development (Baker, Scher & Mackler, 1997; Barton, 2007; Swick, 2009). 23 development in the Swedish preschool class” Nordic Journal of Literacy Research,Vol 5(2), 2019, pp. The purpose of this article is to deepen knowledge of how teachers in Swedish preschool classes describe their work to promote children’s early writing. The research questions are the following: According to teachers, in what daily activities are children given the opportunity to write? The preschool class has been criticized for not making the intended transition clear enough to children, negatively impacting their reading and writing skills (Sandberg, Hellblom-Thibblin & Garpelin (2015). This article deals with that dilemma through scrutinizing writing activities for children as described by teachers

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