All students can benefit from a deeper understanding of how our language works. Playing With Language shows elementary school educators (K–6) how to think about, talk about, and manipulate language out of context. This cognitive skill set, known as metalinguistic awareness, is an important component of reading ability. This practical guide scales activities and teaching suggestions to students’ age, linguistic background, and individual strengths and challenges. The authors offer suggestions for introducing metalinguistic concepts like phonological, semantic, and syntactic awareness with fun activities like games, songs, rhymes, and riddles. The book also identifies and explains research that supports using metalinguistic teaching with diverse students and English learners to build skills in multiple areas, including reading comprehension and decoding ability. Teachers will find that students introduced to language play become continually engaged with language, finding real-world examples with wonder and delight. Book Features: Compiles information on all forms of metalinguistic awareness (MA), spanning different linguistic units and developmental reading levels. - Contains personal anecdotes and classroom-tested instructional recommendations for encouraging language play. - Presents research on how individual language skills affect reading ability. - Offers suggestions for full lesson plans with small groups or whole classes of children, as well as ideas for infusing MA activities into everyday exchanges and book choices. “Attention to children’s language in schools can no longer be an afterthought for teachers. Zipke’s book reminds us that language can be an object of play, mystery, and wonder and a powerful means to support readers to be critical and thoughtful, not only in early childhood but throughout elementary school.” ― Teachers College Record “Marcy Zipke has provided a highly valuable resource for teachers, researchers, and other students of literacy. Her book entails a comprehensive review and analysis of metalinguistic awareness and its contribution to reading and writing acquisition. She illustrates how language is structured on several levels, the value of providing students with insight about these structures, and ways to teach students that are engaging and activate their curiosity about their language. She shows how digging beneath the surface of speech can be fascinating and lead students to become word detectives. Students from preschool through adulthood and English language learners are considered. She grounds her work in science by reporting research that supports and amplifies her discussion. Highlights include the use of jokes, riddles, and ambiguous sentences to teach about language structure. Readers will enjoy and learn from this book, and teachers will gain new ideas to supplement their language arts instruction.” ― Linnea C. Ehri , distinguished professor emerita of educational psychology, Graduate Center, the City University of New York; past President, Society for the Scientific Study of Reading “The major strength of this excellent book is that it provides a comprehensive and insightful analysis of how all forms of metalinguistic awareness, not just phonemic awareness, contribute to learning to read, including both decoding and comprehension skills. The detailed descriptions of classroom activities designed to promote the development of metalinguistic abilities, as well as procedures for assessing their growth, make this book a valuable resource for reading and language arts teachers in the elementary school grades. I highly recommend it.” ― William E. Tunmer , distinguished professor emeritus, Massey University, New Zealand Marcy Zipke is a professor in the Elementary and Special Education Department at Providence College. She has served as department chair and faculty senate representative and is currently coeditor-in-chief of the Journal of Research in Childhood Education .