“…As children become involved in various oral language activities on a daily basis with parents, visitors, siblings, extended family members, and peers, they develop phonemic awareness, print concepts, alphabet symbols, and the structure of language. Talking experiences with people in their society assist children to build basic linguistic concepts, which leads them to be more successful readers and writers (Caserta-Henry, 1996;Juel, 1991;Lee, 1992;Lee, 1993;McGee & Richgels, 1996;Klesius, Griffith, & Zielonka, 1991;Rosberg, 1995). Halliday (1974) and Newman (1985) support Korean parents' view that language acquisition is an active interpersonal process and is the product of oral language interaction.…”