Skip to main contentUniversity of Minnesota

Center for Early Education and Development

 

CEED logo

About CEED

Projects

Publications

Professional Development

Partners & Links
 



 

Minnesota
Early Literacy Project

Photo of classroom and students

Early Childhood Educator Professional Development Program

“The seeds of literacy are planted before children enter school. Important literacy skills do not develop spontaneously, instruction shapes them.”
(Snow, Burns, and Griffen, 1998)

 

Working with a broad-based coalition of local and statewide early education advocates, the Center for Early Education and Development (CEED)  launched the Early Literacy Training Project. The goal was to prepare preschool educators to help Minnesota children develop early literacy and language skills. As a result of this, children from poor neighborhoods, children with limited proficiency in English, and children with disabilities will have access to early childhood environments that promote language and literacy growth and provide them with a solid foundation for later reading.

This was a creative collaboration between the University of Minnesota; Center for Early Childhood and Development; the Minnesota Child Care Resource and Referral Network; the Minneapolis Public Schools; the Minnesota Department of Education, the White Earth Indian Reservation, and the Greater Minneapolis Day Care Association.


  • Project Overview

  • Project Coordinators and Community Partners

  • Minnesota Early Literacy Training Project (MELT2)

    MELT2 was an expansion of the MELT1 project, which offered early literacy skills-based training and coaching to child care providers in Minneapolis and White Earth. Children were assessed using the Individual Growth and Development Indicators (GDIs) and other tools, and the literacy environment was measured with the Early Literacy and Language Classroom Observation. Literacy coaches met with teachers to set goals based on training, observation, and data from the assessment tools.

    These ingredients continue to be included in MELT2. During 2004-05, four additional communities will participate, two in the SE district of MN and 2 in the NE district. Through the partnership with the Minnesota Child Care Resource & Referral Netowrk (MN CCR&R), additional trainers and coaches were recruited and trained. Each of the district CCR&Rs identifed two communities and recruited a group of center-based and family child care providers who committed to SEEDS of Emergent Literacy training, coaching, and ongoing assessment.

    In addition, MELT2 included a systems integration component for this professional development model of training/coaching/progress monitoring. Child care stakeholders are currently paying great attention to research-based professional development practices that build quality environments for young children. MELT 2 partnered with advocates, policy makers, and service providers to expand statewide capacity for improving quality of child care and early education programs in Minnesota.


    Project Staff

    Project Coordinator, MELT 2

    Vicki Hawley
    Center for Early Education and Development
    1954 Buford Avenue, Suite 425, St. Paul, MN, 55108
    Phone: 612-624-8020
    Fax: 612-625-2093
    hawle050@umn.edu  

    Co-Principal Investigators 

    Scott McConnell, Ph.D.
    Center for Early Education and Development
    University of Minnesota
    Education Sciences Building, Room 351
    56 East River Road
    Minneapolis, MN 55455
    Phone: 612-624-6365
    Email: smcconne@umn.edu 

    Michael Rodriguez, Ph.D.
    Department of Educational Psychology
    University of Minnesota
    Phone: 612-624-4324
    Email: mcrdz@umn.edu

    Paul van den Broek, Ph.D.
    University of Minnesota
    Department of Educational Psychology
    Phone: 612-626-1302
    Fax: 612-624-8241
    Email: pvdbroek@umn.edu


    Related Resources

    Early Literacy Resource Handbook
    This is a culmination of work by CEED staff and the many collaborators and contributors to this effort.

    Project Brochure (download a brochure in pdf format, print on legal size paper)

     

    Related Project: Community-based Research to Develop New Approaches to Intervention

     

    November 9-12, 2005: Vicki Hawley, along with co-presenters Beth Menninga and Sandy Heidemann from Words Work!, made a presentation at the 32nd Plains International Reading Association Regional Conference in Minneapolis, MN called "Linking Early Literacy Practice, Assessment, and Reflection."

     

    Literacy Organizations

     

    Center for Reading Research, University of Minnesota

     

    University of Texas Vaughn Gross Center for Reading and Language Arts: Helpful Materials


    Associated Publications

    How Can I Help my Young Child to Become a Reader? (Questions About Kids)

    Early Report Newsletter for Fall 2005 featured story: Minnesota Early Literacy Training Project: Final Report Highlights


    Funding

    This project was funded by the United States Department of Education, Grant No. S349A010152.

     


    Index Search this site Join our mailing list CEED

    The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer.