Alphabet book

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File:ABC trim ABC.jpg
A French ABC-book printed in 1861

An alphabet book is a book primarily designed for young children. It presents letters of the alphabet with corresponding words and/or images. Some alphabet books feature capitals and lower case letter forms, keywords beginning with specific letters, or illustrations of keywords. Alphabet books may consist of sentences, paragraphs, or entire pages highlighting letters and corresponding keywords in a variety of creative and imaginative formats.

Purposes

Alphabet books introduce the sounds and letters of the ordered alphabet. These books provide a non-threatening genre in which children engage in a variety of both fiction and non-fiction texts. Alphabet books provide opportunities for:

  1. Developing conversations and proficiency in oral language
  2. Increasing phonemic awareness
  3. Teaching phonics
  4. Making text connections (Activating prior knowledge)
  5. Predicting (Text talk)
  6. Building vocabulary
  7. Inferencing / drawing conclusions
  8. Sequencing
  9. Identifying elements of story structure
  10. Recognizing point of view
  11. Visualizing setting (Time, place and atmosphere)
  12. Performing Dialogue (Plays and Readers’ Theater)
  13. Rereading for fluency
  14. Retelling for comprehension checks
  15. Engaging Multiple Intelligences through writing, music, art, Dance[1]
A page from Azbuka (Alphabet book, 1574), the first East Slavic textbook. Printed by Ivan Fyodorov in Lviv, in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. This page features Cyrillic.
File:A is for Armadillo.jpg
A page from an alphabet book, showing the letter a and an armadillo

History

Hornbooks

The hornbook, a form of ABC book, was common by Shakespeare's day. It consisted of a piece of parchment or paper pasted on a wooden board and protected by a leaf of horn.[2] Hornbooks displayed letters of the alphabet, a syllabary and prayers for novice readers. Andrew Tuer [3] described a typical hornbook with a line separating the lower case and capital letters from the syllabary. This syllabarium or syllabary, likely added to the hornbook in 1596,[3] taught pronunciations of vowel and consonant combinations.

ab eb ib ob ub ba be bi bo bu

These syllables are possible ancestors to the modern instructional practice of new readers working with onsets and rimes in word families. From the first hornbook, the alphabet format cemented the learning progression from syllables to words.

An example of the reliance on the alphabet for reading instruction is found in John Bunyan's, A Book for Boys and Girls, or Country Rhymes for Children.[4]

To those who are in years but Babes I bow
My Pen to teach them what the Letters be,
And how they may improve their A. B. C.
Nor let my pretty Children them despise.
All needs must there begin, that would be wise,
Nor let them fall under Discouragement,
Who at their hornbook stick, and time hath spent,
Upon that A. B. C., while others do
Into their primer or their Psalter go.

As referenced in this verse, it was an expectation of the period that “babes” began as readers with knowledge of the alphabet. Armed with the letters of the alphabet from the hornbook, children encountered other early forms of reading materials.

The child’s alphabet book is considered one of the oldest literary genres of American literature.

Battledores

The battledore was an instrument like a small racket, used for playing badminton. The term was applied to the wooden or cardboard tablets, which gradually replaced the hornbook as a device for teaching children to read. The wording printed on them varied greatly, but usually featured an alphabet, and, unlike the hornbook, entertainment was provided as well as instruction in the form of illustrations.[5] They first appeared in the 1750s and were produced until the middle of the nineteenth century. The battledore was a more complex type of horn book printed on thick paper folded in three parts containing enlarged text with word to object illustrations for each of the capital letters bordering the four sides. The letter-word associations provide insight into eighteenth century religious and sociocultural priorities.

A is represented by an image of an Angel
J Judge
K King
M Mitre (religious Head wear)
Q Queen
T Turk
X Xerxes
Z Zeal (kneeling figure with open prayer book)

Tuer's Royal Battledore illustrated the lower case alphabet letters with a for Apple; j, k, q, and x for Judge, King, Queen and Xerxes; m for Mouse and z for Zany jester. In fact, some battledores' upper and lower borders contained this rhyme:

He that ne'er learns his ABC,
For ever will a Blockhead be.
But he that learns these Letters fair,
Shall have a Coach to take the Air.

There is evidence of a gradual shift to more secular topics for general reading instruction from predominantly religious material.

Primers and spellers

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Experienced with both hornbooks and battledores, children graduated on to the modern concept of a small book, multiple paper pages covered with a thick, protective layer. Early reading booklets or religious primers contained both the alphabet and increasingly complicated lists of alphabetized syllables along with selected excerpts from the Bible. From tablet to booklet, the ABC format served as the most common framework for additional reading materials. The first church primers paralleled the introduction of school textbooks known as “the ABC”.[6] Both colonial primers and ABC spellers employed the alphabet as an organizational feature for literacy instruction and spiritual study.

Originally imported from England, children’s reading textbooks aligned with the educational emphasis on the alphabet. While students were first trained to recite the alphabet, moralistic readings were framed around the letters of the alphabet. During the American colonial period the more secular “ABC” spellers quickly fell out of favor in comparison with the more religious primers; nevertheless, the alphabet remained the most systematic means of ordering the written contents of schoolbooks.

The New England Primer

Dating back to 1683, the New England Primer contained rhyming couplets for each letter of the alphabet. These patterned rhymes were often supported by gloomy woodcut illustrations. The content of these paired lines varied from overwhelmingly religious to somewhat secular depending upon the particular version of the New England Primer.

The standard Primer beginning 'In Adam's fall, we sinned all' remained consistent throughout the numerous published texts; however, rhymes were occasionally edited for religious or political purposes, as demonstrated by the 1729 edition of the New England Primer. The passage, ‘our KING the good, No man of blood’ illustrated the letter K[7] Due to the conflict with the English monarchy, The K couplet was altered and appeared in the revised 1777 edition as ‘Proud Korah's troop, was swallowed up.’[8] Similarly, in the same 1777 version, 'The dog will bite, a thief at night' was replaced by a Biblical reference. 'The deluge drowned the earth around’ was inserted for ‘the watchful dog’. Referring to mortal sin, the original U for 'Uriah's beauteous wife made David seek his life’ was censored by omitting U and skipping to V. The alphabet letters were used to teach the moral code aspired by society and religion.

In the New England Primer, the couplets were followed by alphabetized Biblical sentences; the “Alphabet of Lessons for Youth” was designed for further reading practice and lifelong moral instruction.[7] Both the 1777 and 1843 editions of the Primer maintained the same sentence excerpts from the Bible.[9] The following are a few examples highlighting letters A, D, K and U:

A Wise son maketh a glad father, but a foolish son is the heaviness of his mother.
DO not the abominable thing which I hate saith the Lord.
KEEP thy heart with all diligence, for out of it are the issues of life.
UPON the wicked, God shall rain an horrible tempest.

Clearly, the immensely popular New England Primer continued to influence educational practice even beyond the revolutionary period. Of parallel longevity, the battledore continued to be published well into the 18th century. Believed to be the inventor of battledores in 1746, Benjamin Collins actually printed 100,000 copies between 1771 and 1780[10]

Versions of The Child’s New Plaything

Exemplifying the move away from strictly religious texts to more moral works, an outstanding example of the next generation of readers was the 1742 version of The Child’s New Plaything. Sensitive to a youthful audience, the anonymous author introduced the alphabet with a lettered story about an appetizing apple pie.

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A Apple-Pye.
B bit it.
C cut it.
D divided it.
E eat it.
F fought for it.
G got it.
H had it.
I it'd it.
J join’d for’t.
K kept it.
L long’d for’t.
M mourn’d for’t.
N nodded at it.
O open’d it.
P peep’d in’t.
Q quarter’d it.
R run for’t.
S snatch’d it.
T turn’d it.
U use'd it.
V view’d it.
W what'd it.
X excite'd it.
Y you'd it.
Z zone it.

& I wish I had a Piece of it now in my Hand.[11]

Later versions of the rhyme, now known as the Apple Pie ABC, became more elaborate and diversified.

In addition, The Child’s New Plaything contained the alphabet story, A was an Archer,[12] which was also to go through many later editions.

Present

Today there are many diverse kinds of alphabet books that captivate a reader’s interest through alliteration, onomatopoeia, creative narratives, poetry of all kinds, clever three-dimensional illusions, mysterious visual treasure hunts, humor, and curiosity. Electronic alphabet books are now on the market, with various animations and audio features.

See also

References

  1. What is an alphabet book at sil.org accessed 9 September 2007
  2. Indiana University-hornbooks
  3. 3.0 3.1 Tuer, A. W. (1896). A history of the horn-book, vols. 1 & 2. London: Leadenhall Press.
  4. Bunyan, John A Book for Boys and Girls, or Country Rhymes for Children., 1686, London, Printed for N. P. [Nathaniel Ponder].
  5. Indiana University-battledores
  6. Smith, N. B. (2002). American reading instruction. Newark, DE: International Reading Association. p. 7
  7. 7.0 7.1 Smith, N. B. (2002). American reading instruction. Newark, DE: International Reading Association. p. 21-2
  8. New England Primer 1777 ed. online
  9. [1][2]
  10. (Osborne Collection of Early Children's Books, 1566-1910: a Catalogue, Toronto, Toronto Public Library, 1975, p. 109)
  11. Monaghan, E. J. (2005). Learning to read and write in colonial America. Amhurst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press. p. 315)
  12. www.library.sfsu.edu

External links