Teaching Reading At Home From Birth On

Posted by admin
Jun 02 2009

Teaching Reading At Home From Birth On

  reading at home

Reading and Babies

Child development begins at birth, and so does reading instruction. From the moment babies are born they are learning the different sounds of the human language. Even before they can understand a single word, their ears are listening to the sounds and their brains are processing them. This is the first step a child takes along the path of learning to read.

If you have a baby, you should talk to your baby and read to her in order to prepare her for later reading activities. Once she is a toddler and can talk and sing, she can begin learning letters and their sounds. This comes earlier than most parents think. Children as young as two can recognize letters and associate sounds with them, with proper instruction. Pre-reading activities include reading aloud to children, singing the alphabet song, and pointing out letters to the children.

Reading, Writing, and Preschoolers

Three and four year olds are ready to begin learning a little more about how to read. After children have mastered the names of the letters in the alphabet and learned some sounds, they are ready to begin doing reading activities at home. This is the time to introduce phonics.

Phonics is a system of reading instruction that emphasizes the sounds that letters and letter combinations make. Children are taught to associate sounds with letters, and therefore can use those sounds to read and write words. You can spend ten minutes a day working with letter sounds and three-letter words, thus preparing your child for longer sessions in school.

Children are also learning to write at this age. When your child begins to show interest in holding a pen or crayon, you should help him learn to hold it correctly. As soon as he has mastered scribbling, help him form simple letters, like O or T. Reading and writing are taught side by side in school, so you can do the same thing when you are helping your youngster with reading activities at home.

Reading and School Age Children

With this good foundation, your child will be ready for her traditional education. Do not be surprised if she is ahead of her classmates when she first enters school. You may decide to home school her to keep her working ahead. Either way, she will feel comfortable when school starts because she will already know the basics. Many four-year-olds who are taught phonics can read before entering Kindergarten.

Once your child enters school, be sure to continue working with her at home. Do some reading activities every day. Even if all you do is read with your child, taking turns reading age appropriate material, you will be reinforcing what she is learning in school. This is the time to make reading fun, because the memorization and drills will be happening in school.

Another way to reinforce what is being taught in the school is to use the computer. Programs like Child Font can help your child practice and solidify the phonics skills that are necessary when learning to read. The computer is interesting to children, so utilize it as much as possible when helping your child with reading. Remember, to most children learning on the computer is playing, not education, so they will want to spend time working on their reading skills with the right reading program.

 

By: Childfont

 

 

 

 

The Home Stretch

The kids can read a book in four days- their reading rate has really improved. 3. The kids kept good notes on most (but not all) of the books they read this year. What I Didn’t Teach Well. 

Some Parents Actually Think That Teaching Reading is Rocket

Teaching reading takes time not rocket science, and the more time you put in the faster your kids will learn. Really there is no fast, easy way to teach reading but you don’t need to be a rocket scientist to teach your kids to read.  

Great Tools for Teaching Reading

She was already reading a little bit when we brought her home, so we used Sing, Spell, Read and Write to get her up to speed. While SSRW worked wonders for Brianna, it wasn’t a good fit for teaching the younger kids to read.  

Moms Reading Lies Truth

Therefore, reading is best taught to a child one-on-one by his parent. It has been my teaching experience, in the home school arena, when talking with parents in one-on-one tutoring sessions

Teaching Reading Painlessly

So be prepared to change your approach if needed. This is what teaching a child to read looks like in my home: The first thing we do is read, read, read all the time. Letting our preschooler see us reading for pleasure. 

 

 

 

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