The written representation of language and linguistic elements. It can include graphemic (i.e., letter) shapes and font, sound-meaning-graph correlations, and graph sequencing.
Published in Chapter:
Emergent Literacy Development in Adult L2 Learners: From Theory to Practice
Lisa Gonzalves (University of California, Davis, USA)
Copyright: © 2020
|Pages: 21
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-2722-1.ch003
Abstract
Globally, many adults lack access to education due to gender, poverty, ethnic discrimination, political conflict, and geographic proximity. Moreover, many of these same adults may migrate at some point in their lives, needing to adapt to new linguistic settings. Oftentimes, such adults need to learn both an entirely new language and first-time literacy - not necessarily in their first language, but in the new language (L2) which they may not yet speak. By providing a robust overview of scholarship on emergent literacy acquisition in children and adults, this chapter heightens understanding of the complexity of acquiring literacy for the first time as an L2 adult migrant. The chapter provides practical guidelines on how teachers of L2 adults with emergent literacy can apply this knowledge in the classroom, focusing on three pedagogical areas - vocabulary acquisition, metalinguistic awareness, and academic socialization.