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| How
Can I help My Child be Ready to Read and Ready to Learn? |
| 1. |
Talk
to your infant and toddler to help him learn to speak and
understand the meaning of words. Point to objects that
are near and describe them as you play and do daily activities
together. Having a large vocabulary gives a child a great
start when he enters school. |
| 2. |
Read
to your baby every day starting at six months of age. Reading
and playing with books is a wonderful way to spend special
time with her. Hearing words over and over helps her become
familiar with them. Reading to your baby is one of the
best ways to help her learn. |
| 3. |
Use
sounds, songs, gestures and words that rhyme to help your
baby learn about language and its many uses. Babies need
to hear language from a human being. Television is just
noise to a baby. |
| 4. |
Point
out the printed words in your home and other places you
take your child such as the grocery store. Spend as much
time listening to your child as you do talking to him. |
| 5. |
Take
children's books and writing materials with you whenever
you leave home. This gives your child fun activities to
entertain and occupy him while traveling and going to the
doctor's office or other appointments. |
| 6. |
Create
a quiet, special place in your home for your child to read,
write and draw. Keep books and other reading materials
where your child can easily reach them. |
| 7. |
Help
your child see that reading is important. Set a good example
for your child by reading books, newspapers and magazines. |
| 8. |
Limit
the amount and type of television you and your child watch.
Better yet, turn off the television and spend more time
cuddling and reading books with your child. The time and
attention you give your child has many benefits beyond
helping him be ready for success in school. |
| 9. |
Reach
out to libraries and community and faith-based organizations.
These organizations can:
| * |
Help
you find age-appropriate books to use at home with
your child; |
| * |
Show
you creative ways to use books with your child
and other tips to help her learn; and |
| * |
Provide
year-round children's reading and educational activities. |
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| How
Do I Know a Good Early Reading Program When I See One? |
| 1. |
Every
teacher is excited about reading and promotes the value
and fun of reading to students. |
| 2. |
All
students are carefully evaluated, beginning in Kindergarten,
to see what they know and what they need to become good
readers. |
| 3. |
Reading
instruction and practice lasts 90 minutes or more a day
in first, second and third grades and 60 minutes a day
in Kindergarten. |
| 4. |
All
students in first, second and third grades who are behind
in reading get special instruction and practice. These
students receive, throughout the day, a total of 60 extra
minutes of instruction. |
| 5. |
Before-
or after-school help is given to all students beyond first
grade who need extra instruction or who need to review
skills. Summer school is available for students who are
behind at the end of the year. |
| 6. |
Reading
instruction and practice includes work on letters, sounds
and blending sounds. Students learn to blend letters and
sounds to form new words. |
| 7. |
Learning
new words and their meaning is an important part of instruction. |
| 8. |
Students
have daily spelling practice and weekly spelling tests. |
| 9. |
The
connection between reading and writing is taught on a daily
basis. Students write daily. Papers are corrected and returned
to the students. By the end of second grade, students write
final copies of corrected papers. Corrected papers are
sent home for parents to see. |
| 10. |
All
students are read to each day from different kinds of books.
Students discuss what they read with teachers and other
students. |
| 11. |
All
students have a chance to read both silently and aloud
in school each day and at home every night. |
| 12. |
Every
classroom has a library of books that children want to
read. This includes easy books and books that are more
difficult. |
| 13. |
The
school library is used often and has many books. Students
may check books out during the summer and over holidays. |
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| Simple
Strategies for Creating Strong Readers |
| Without
doubt, reading with children spells success for early literacy.
Putting a few simple strategies into action will make a significant
difference in helping children develop into good readers and
writers. |
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| Through
reading aloud, providing print materials, and promoting positive
attitudes about reading and writing, you can have a powerful
impact on children's literacy and learning. |
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| 1. |
Invite
a child
to read with you every day. |
| 2. |
When
reading a book where the print is large, point word by
word as you read. This will help the child learn that reading
goes from left to right and understand that the word he
or she says is the word he or she sees. |
| 3. |
Read
a child's favorite book over and over again. |
| 4. |
Read
many stories with rhyming words and lines that repeat.
Invite the child to join in on these parts. Point, word
by word, as he or she reads along with you. |
| 5. |
Discuss
new words. For example, "This big house is called
a palace. Who do you think lives in a palace?" |
| 6. |
Stop
and ask about the pictures and about what is happening
in the story. |
| 7. |
Read
from a variety of children's books, including fairy tales,
song books, poems, and information books. |
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| Reading
well is at the heart of all learning. Children who can't read
well, can't learn. Help make a difference for a child. |
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| The
Five Essential Components of Reading |
| Reading
with children and helping them practice specific reading components
can dramatically improve their ability to read. Scientific
research shows that there are five essential components of
reading that children must be taught in order to learn to read.
Adults can help children learn to be good readers by systematically
practicing these five components: |
| 1. |
Recognizing
and using individual sounds to create words, or phonemic
awareness. Children need to be taught to hear sounds
in words and that words are made up of the smallest parts
of sound, or phonemes. |
| 2. |
Understanding
the relationships between written letters and spoken sounds,
or phonics. Children need to be taught the sounds
individual printed letters and groups of letters make.
Knowing the relationships between letters and sounds helps
children to recognize familiar words accurately and automatically,
and "decode" new words. |
| 3. |
Developing
the ability to read a text accurately and quickly, or reading
fluency. Children must learn to read words rapidly
and accurately in order to understand what is read. When
fluent readers read silently, they recognize words automatically.
When fluent readers read aloud, they read effortlessly
and with expression. Readers who are weak in fluency read
slowly, word by word, focusing on decoding words instead
of comprehending meaning. |
| 4. |
Learning
the meaning and pronunciation of words, or vocabulary
development. Children need to actively build and expand
their knowledge of written and spoken words, what they
mean and how they are used. |
| 5. |
Acquiring
strategies to understand, remember and communicate what
is read, or reading comprehension strategies. Children
need to be taught comprehension strategies, or the steps
good readers use to make sure they understand text. Students
who are in control of their own reading comprehension become
purposeful, active readers. |
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