So, what is literacy? According to Rudell (2002), literacy is the knowledge and skills necessary to read and write. Also, according to Montoya (208), there are different definitions of literacy, one of them is that it is how a person can identify, understand, interpret, create, communicate and compute printed materials from different sources. Another interesting definition is: How an individual can participate within his environment through his knowledge, achieving objectives and participating always in his process of learning. These definitions can give us a wide perspective of different definitions of literacy that authors coined through different periods. It is interesting to point out here that literacy is important for individuals interacting in society. As an individual, young children, or adults, we need to be always in a learning process in our whole life. This interaction with readings and writing exercises can give us the opportunity to participate in our community decisions during our lives.
According to Vesay and Gischar (203), the National Reading Panel divided literacy into five critical domains: phonemic awareness, alphabetic principle, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension. These domains are the roots of good literacy, and it is important to teach them to our young students in the early stages of their development. Phonological awareness is a broad definition of language in different parts, word by word, and also is about listening to the syllables of the words. Recognizing rhymes in the words, and the learning process when kids can practice alliteration (eg. the same sound in the words, six smiles softly spoken). According to the National Center on Improving Literacy (208), the alphabetic principle is the knowledge that the letters have sounds and they are in
the alphabet, for example, when a child can identify the letter ΒmΒ and its sound ΒmmmΒ. This is when a person can identify sounds and letters in a word, then can read and write, building words with the sounds of the spoken language. Also, the alphabetic principle has two components: alphabetic understanding is knowing that words are made up of letters that represent the sounds of speech, and phonological recoding is knowing how to translate the letters in printed words into the sounds they make to read and pronounce the words accurately. In Fluency Matters (204), the author explained his own definition of fluency, and he says that reading fluency has two ends, the first one is about Βword recognition in a textΒ while the person can comprehend what he/she is reading is on the other end. This is when the person can identify automatically words, recognize and identify them in a written text, but with adequate speed. Stahl (2005) defines vocabulary as follows: Vocabulary knowledge is knowledge; the knowledge of a word not only implies a definition but also implies how that word fits into the world. This part is important within the process of literacy in children. At an early age, children should learn a complex vocabulary during their kinder grade since this practice will help them develop their language and to have success in their upper grades. In order to understand the meaning of comprehension, Pardo (2004) refers that comprehension is the process of simultaneously extracting and constructing meaning through interaction and involvement with written language. It is imperative that we, as professionals working in educational settings, should help and revise our students when they are reading aloud their books making sure that they are understanding what they are reading.