Everyone knows just how important it is for children to develop sound literacy skills from an early age and it is also widely accepted that music, and in particular singing, can have a wide range of benefits for children. Now British Educational Psychologist, Alan Davies, is set to launch a new project, the THRASS Family SING-A-LONG Project, that will use 44 songs to enable children, and also older learners, to develop their literacy skills, while at the same time deriving many other benefits and having an enormous amount of fun.
THRASS UK has already earned a reputation for producing highly successful innovative resources for helping children to read and spell as part of its widely-acclaimed THRASS (Teaching
Handwriting Reading And Spelling Skills) phonics programme, and the new THRASS Family SING-A-LONG Project will use 44 songs that parents and others can sing with children to explain the
44 sounds and 120 main spelling choices of English. The songs have really memorable tunes in different musical styles and wonderful imaginative titles such as "The moon fell out of the
sky", "A great big gorilla" and "You don't get pandas in Africa". They will be available on an interactive book and an audio CD, which will be complemented by a 96-page hard-back book and
a colouring book. And the resources will have a truly universal appeal, as Alan Davies has developed them with the help of experts from around the world: a music specialist in South
Africa, an artist in Australia, and a computer programmer and Alan's wife, an experienced teacher and teacher-trainer, in the UK.
Singing can benefit children in all sorts of different ways and there are many reasons why singing is such a great activity for them, and for adults too. Group singing is particularly
powerful in its ability to create a sense of shared purpose, social unity and collective enjoyment. Singing is good for children's health, as it improves circulation, breathing and
posture, and when combined with movement also helps to combat obesity and increase general physical fitness. And it is also good for their emotional well-being, as it can help them
express their emotions, and increase their confidence and communication skills. But perhaps the most important benefit is that singing has been shown to accelerate learning and improve
the memory. Very young children have been shown to increase the amount, quality and understanding of speech developed through singing activities.
This is readily born out by the experience of Chris Griffiths, International Development Manager at THRASS UK, who has been amazed at the rapid progress that his five-year-old daughter
has already made after just a few days of listening to an advance copy of the audio CD. "My five-year-old's response to the SING-A-LONG CD has convinced me of the tremendous potential of
the THRASS Family SING-A-LONG project. We played the CD for her in the car while driving around the UK over Christmas and within the space of a single journey she knew all the tunes and
also many of the words to the songs. She is also now very quickly learning all the different sounds and spelling choices and already knows, for example, that there are two 'd's in ladder
but only one in dog, one 'p' in panda but 2 'p's in hippo, and much more; and we each now have our favourite songs. This really is the most wonderful resource and I am sure the project is
going to be extremely successful wherever it is implemented."
Parents need to understand and use four 'searchlights' for reading with their children: a 'Word Recognition Searchlight', a 'Phonics Searchlight', a 'Context Searchlight' and a 'Grammar
Searchlight', and the THRASS Family SING-A-LONG Project will help them to understand synthetic phonics alongside the three other 'Searchlights'. The project will increase their confidence
in identifying the one-, two- and three-letter spelling choices in English words and saying the sounds that they represent and make it much easier for both children and adults to master
the sounds and spelling choices of English.
The THRASS Family SING-A-LONG Project will be launched on 31 January at Holy Rosary School, Edenvale, South Africa, where children from 14 schools will be giving the world premiere of the
songs that make up the project. The concert will be attended by VIPs and international delegates to the THRASS Absa TalkTogether Conference that is being hosted by the University of the
Witwatersrand on 31 January and 1 February. Together with parents, teachers and children from schools in the area, they will have the chance to see the tremendous potential of the THRASS
Family SING-A-LONG Project and resources for bringing together singing and literacy to help children, and older learners too, to develop their literacy skills. Further concerts will take
place later in the year in South Africa, the UK and the Caribbean.
The THRASS extensive picture-based training website for schools and parents with easy access to a wide range of resources and support materials and extensive evidence of the widespread
success of THRASS is at www.thrass.co.uk
For more information about the THRASS Absa TalkTogether Project, visit www.talktogether.co.za and www.thrass.co.uk/talktogether.htm
For details of THRASS Professional Development Courses that are held regularly in the UK, Europe, West and Southern Africa and elsewhere, visit www.thrass.co.uk/courses.htm
Issued by: THRASS UK News Media Centre www.thrass.co.uk/nm.htm
Mike Meade, Media Director, +44 1829 741413 Mob: 07970 151 738
Chris Griffiths, International Development, +30 266 203 1207