Teaching Phonics and Vocabulary Through Children’s Literature in Early Childhood Initial Teacher Education: Trial of the Non-Scripted Intentional Teaching (N-SIT) Tool
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Pre-Service Teachers’ Knowledge of Early Reading
2.2. Picture Book Shared Reading in the Prior-to-School Years and Code-Related Literacy
2.3. Shared Picture Book Reading and Preschool Vocabulary Development
2.4. Adaptive Literacy Teaching and Early Reading
- What knowledge of teaching reading do pre-service teachers have in relation to shared book reading and code-related skills?
- How can a Non-Scripted Intentional Teaching (NSIT) tool support phonics-focused teaching through the use of quality children’s literature?
3. Methodology and Materials
3.1. Picture Book Selection
- Australian author and illustrator;
- The Children’s Book Council of Australia Winner: The Children’s Book of the Year Awards;
- Author Frances Watts is a multiple award-winning children’s book author. Illustrator A. Yi is an illustrator of the well-known and best-selling Alice Maranda series written by Jacqueline Harvey;
- Repetition for its essential literary devices, including adding rhythm, supporting narrative structure, and generating meaning (Gannon, 2009);
- Inclusion of rhyme and/or alliteration to support phonics and phonological awareness;
- Inclusion of Tier-1 (my, friend, loves, dog, tree) and more than five Tier-2 words (bored, sniffs, disgusting, rather, handsome). Excluding the 11 repetitions of “My friend Fred”, the text contained 45% verbs, 29% nouns and 4% adjectives. Note that Tier-3 words were not a priority for this study, as Tier-3 words are usually relevant for specific content areas and more often occur in non-fiction texts in the prior-to-school years.
3.2. Development of the N-SIT Pedagogical Tool
3.3. Pre-Survey and Post-Survey of Pre-Service Teacher Knowledge
3.4. The Study Setting and the Participants
3.5. Data Collection
4. Results
4.1. Pre-Survey Data Analysis
4.1.1. Likert Scale Reported Feelings of Preparedness to Teach Beginning Reading and Definitions
4.1.2. Pre-Survey Written Feedback
Explanations of what are considered by PSTs as examples of quality early reading teaching in classrooms?
One way I would teach is by reading a picture book to the students. I would then select a word that the students may be unsure of the definition of. I would then ask if anyone knows the definition. I would then explain what the word means and use examples of the children from the class using that word, e.g., if it was the word ‘auburn’, I would see if any child in the class has that colour hair “Sally has auburn hair”. I would then write the word out on a whiteboard and talk to the students about what letters they see and sounds they make.(Respondent 2);
When reading a book for a small group of children, emphasise the new vocabulary that the children might not seen/heard before by asking open-ended questions, explain the words, and provide examples(Respondent 12).
4.2. Implementation of the N-SIT During Tutorial Activities
4.3. Post-Survey Data Analysis
Post-Survey Written Data
5. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Question | Well-Prepared | Somewhat Prepared | Not Well-Prepared |
---|---|---|---|
How prepared do you feel to teach beginning reading? | 6 (25%) | 15 (67%) | 2 (8%) |
How prepared do you feel to teach phonics in your next professional experience/practicum? | 4 (17%) | 12 (50%) | 8 (33%) |
How prepared do you feel to teach vocabulary? | 4 (17%) | 15 (63%) | 5 (20%) |
How prepared do you feel to teach phonological awareness? | 3 (13%) | 13 (54%) | 8 (33%) |
How prepared do you feel to teach writing? | 5 (21%) | 12 (50%) | 7 (30%) |
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Campbell, S.; Neumann, M.M.; Friend, L. Teaching Phonics and Vocabulary Through Children’s Literature in Early Childhood Initial Teacher Education: Trial of the Non-Scripted Intentional Teaching (N-SIT) Tool. Educ. Sci. 2025, 15, 684. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15060684
Campbell S, Neumann MM, Friend L. Teaching Phonics and Vocabulary Through Children’s Literature in Early Childhood Initial Teacher Education: Trial of the Non-Scripted Intentional Teaching (N-SIT) Tool. Education Sciences. 2025; 15(6):684. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15060684
Chicago/Turabian StyleCampbell, Stacey, Michelle M. Neumann, and Lesley Friend. 2025. "Teaching Phonics and Vocabulary Through Children’s Literature in Early Childhood Initial Teacher Education: Trial of the Non-Scripted Intentional Teaching (N-SIT) Tool" Education Sciences 15, no. 6: 684. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15060684
APA StyleCampbell, S., Neumann, M. M., & Friend, L. (2025). Teaching Phonics and Vocabulary Through Children’s Literature in Early Childhood Initial Teacher Education: Trial of the Non-Scripted Intentional Teaching (N-SIT) Tool. Education Sciences, 15(6), 684. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15060684