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Designing a Communication Curriculum in Early Childhood Education

Designing a Communication Curriculum in Early Childhood Education 1

Creating a Language-Rich Communication Curriculum:

Communication and language skills are critical for improving the quality of life for young people. However, children with SEN or disadvantaged backgrounds often lag in early language development, resulting in long-term challenges to progress. A well-planned communication curriculum in early childhood education(EYFS, Nursery or Kindergarten) is essential to build these foundational skills for all children, especially those needing extra support.

The Importance of Early Language

Early language development is crucial for children’s cognitive, social, and emotional growth. Language skills enable children to communicate their needs, feelings, and thoughts, as well as to understand and interact with others. Language also supports learning in various domains, such as literacy, numeracy, and problem-solving. Research has shown that children’s language abilities at an early age can predict their academic achievement and life outcomes later on. Therefore, it is important to provide children with rich and stimulating language environments from birth and to identify and support those who may have difficulties in developing their language skills such as DLD.

Creating Language-Rich Environments

Building a Comprehensive Early Childhood Communication Curriculum

Many of the settings I have worked with base this on a Total Communication Curriculum or approach. Total communication is a way of teaching and supporting children who have communication difficulties, using a range of methods and modes of communication. You blend as needed the communication supports available such as speech, sign language including Makaton, gestures, symbols, pictures, and devices. A total communication curriculum aims to help children develop their expressive and receptive communication skills, as well as their social and emotional skills.

A total communication curriculum for an EYFS Setting, Pre-School or Kindergarten requires guidance on how it is planned and implemented for the individuals not just a description of the communication approaches used:

If you want to learn more about how to design and deliver a total communication curriculum for EYFS/Kindergarten, look at of these resources:

Adaptive Teaching Differentiation and Support

Assessing Progress

Activities to Include in a Communication Curriculum

Prioritising communication and language from an early age through intentional environments, activities, and curriculum pays off in children’s future academic and career success. Make communication development a central focus.

FAQs:

Q: How can I convince administrators of the value of a communication curriculum?
A: Present research on long-term benefits and share observed gaps in children’s skills as evidence of need.

Q: Where can I find resources to build a language-rich communication curriculum?
A: Reputable publishers offer pre-made curriculums focused on communication. Adapt materials from speech therapy and ELL resources. Also, search for settings similar to your own and look at their policies.

Q: How should we document and track language growth?
A: Maintain portfolios of observations, work samples, videos. Use rubrics aligned to state early learning standards.

Q: What strategies help children who struggle to communicate?
A: Visual aids, modelling, assistive technology, sensory tools, social stories, positive behaviour supports.

Q: How can families support early communication skills?
A: Provide handouts with read-alouds, songs, and activities to practice at home. Create a library of sensory stories or adapted books. Maintain contact through communication logs.

References and Research Linked to a Total Communication Curriculum

I have tried to include only open-access academic research references that go into the total communication curriculum approach.

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