Every day, you help students find the “right” words—words to express themselves, explain their thinking, and respond to classmates. The truth is that students often lack the oral language tools they need to say what they mean.
This matters because oral language is the foundation of literacy. Yet, oral language development is often underemphasized or misunderstood.
Strengthening literacy starts with strengthening talk. And that’s where explicit oral language instruction comes in.
Oral language is biologically natural, while reading and writing are biologically unnatural skills that depend on language knowledge. Students use what they know about spoken language to make sense of complex texts, summarize ideas, and communicate in writing.
Research has shown the following:
Vocabulary depth supports reading comprehension.
Syntax knowledge helps students make meaning from sentences.
Listening and speaking skills predict writing proficiency.
In short, oral language is the engine that drives literacy growth.
Students need support in the following five components of oral language development.
Vocabulary: the words students understand and use
Syntax: how words and phrases form sentences
Semantics: the meaning and nuances of language
Listening Comprehension: making meaning from spoken language
Expressive Language: communicating ideas clearly
Together, these skills give students the tools to understand text and express their thinking.
Even with strong instruction, helping students build oral language skills can feel complex. Students come to school with varied language experiences, instructional minutes are limited, and classroom talk is often spontaneous rather than structured. In these moments, consistent routines and purposeful scaffolds make all the difference—for every learner.
Five research-backed strategies help students build the language skills that support literacy:
Teach vocabulary explicitly and provide repeated opportunities to use new words.
Model and practice syntax through sentence combining, expanding, and connecting.
Use structured discussion routines (e.g., Think–Pair–Share) to normalize academic talk.
Ground language in rich content, giving students meaningful ideas to talk about.
Connect oral rehearsal to writing, helping students shape ideas before putting them on paper.
Sample Vocabulary (PDF)
Speaking & Listening Goal Tracker Exemplars (PDF)
Imagine students learning the word community. They practice using it to discuss texts, explain ideas, and make connections. As they talk, they draw on vocabulary, syntax, semantics, and expressive language—the very skills that strengthen comprehension and writing.
Strong oral language instruction relies on the following:
Intentional language experiences
Repetition and meaningful use
Deepening understanding over time
Sequenced complexity
Opportunities for structured and spontaneous talk
Scaffolds for multilingual learners
Oral language is the root of literacy success. When students can speak with clarity and confidence, they’re better prepared to read, write, and build knowledge. Explicit vocabulary instruction, structured discourse, and opportunities for rich conversation help students achieve their goals as readers and writers.