Reading at home with your child

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reading at Auriol.
Advertisements

Reading at home with your child
Tips for Reading and Writing
Reading Sarisbury Infant School. Why is reading important? Creating a love of reading in children is potentially one of the most powerful ways of improving.
East Wichel Community Primary School
Helping Your Child with Reading The Power of Reading! Creating a love of reading in children is potentially one of the most powerful ways of improving.
Supporting your child with reading.
We are so glad you are here!  Creating a love of reading in children is potentially one of the most powerful ways of improving academic standards.
Helping Your Child with Reading. The Power of Reading! Creating a love of reading in children is potentially one of the most powerful ways of improving.
Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015.
St. Joseph’s Catholic Infant School Reading Workshop ‘Reading is Succeeding’ ‘I tapped the page and nothing happened’
Phonics and Reading for Parents. To teach children how to read and write, all schools use phonics. Phonics started in nursery, where children learn fundamental.
Literacy Reading Spelling Writing.
Parent Reading Workshop
October 15 th  Introduction  Importance of reading  Teaching of Phonics at OPIS  Teaching of Reading at OPIS  How Parents can support reading.
Helping your child with their reading 4 th November 2015 Oak Tree Primary School.
Reading at home with your child. Reading and a love for reading begins at home A child’s success as a reader begins much earlier than the first day at.
READING AT HOME WITH YOUR CHILD. You’re never too young! Polar Bear
FOUNDATION STAGE READING WORKSHOP OCTOBER 29 TH 2015.
Reading 14 th October Believe, Achieve, Enjoy. Reading at home with your child.
Reading at home with your child. The Power of Reading! Creating a love of reading in children is potentially one of the most powerful ways of improving.
Reading Meeting For Parents Monday 11 th January pm Penketh Community Primary School.
Supporting your child with reading in KS1 February 2016
The Power of Reading! Creating a love of reading in children is probably one of the most powerful ways of improving children’s academic achievements in.
Reading with and to your child. Creating a love of reading in children is potentially one of the most powerful ways of improving academic standards in.
Reading At Home Yeronga SHS. The Power of Reading 1. One of the most powerful ways to improve academic achievement in schools 2. Success in reading.
Reading. The Power of Reading! Creating a love of reading in children is potentially one of the most powerful ways of improving academic standards in.
What Do The Following People Have In Common?.
Reading Workshop. The Power of Reading! Creating a love of reading in children is potentially one of the most powerful ways of improving academic standards.
Presenting a Parents’ Meeting. Objectives of the session To support schools to deliver parents’ literacy meetings; To develop parents’ understanding of.
Reading is the cornerstone for learning in all areas of the curriculum. Pre-reading skills are the skills children need in order to help them to become.
Reading and Phonic Workshop Hannah Hepworth-Smith.
Reading At Home Yearsley Grove Primary School
Reading workshop for Parents
Reading at Bishop Aldhelm’s CE VA Primary School
Welcome to ‘Supporting your child with Reading’
Phun with Phonics!.
Reading at home with your child
Parent Information Evening
The Power of Reading How do we teach children to read in Colfe’s Junior School and also produce life long readers?
The more that you read, the more things you will know
Guided Reading Workshop
St. Mary’s Catholic Primary School
Reading at home with your child
Learning to Read..
Reading with children Wednesday 11th January 2017.
What the problem looks like:
Supporting your child with reading in KS1 March 2017
Reading at New Swannington Primary School
Wheelock Primary School READING.
Reading Workshop
Learning to read through phonics
Reading at home with your child
9am, Level 5 - Westbury site
Aims To look at how children learn to read and write.
Parents, Children and Teachers Working Together
Welcome to the Key Stage 1 Reading Presentation
Be a great role model Reading at home.
Penketh Community Primary School Reading Meeting For Parents
Reading at home with your child
Phonics and Reading.
Welcome to the Key Stage 1 Reading Presentation
Parent Reading Workshop 27th February 2018
Reading workshop Part 1 Ms El-Azizi.
Reception Parent Reading Workshop BSB November 6th 2018
Time to Read A guide for parents.
Parent Reading Workshop 24th September 2018
Welcome to the Reading Revolution LKS2 Parent Workshop
Aims Early literacy skills Strategies we use to read texts
The Dingle Parent Reading Workshop
Presentation transcript:

Reading at home with your child

The Power of Reading! Creating a love of reading in children is potentially one of the most powerful ways of improving academic standards in school. There can be few better ways to improve pupils chances in school, or beyond in the wider world than to enable them to become truly independent readers. If children are happy to read, they are more likely to do so when they have to as well as when they want to.

Reading memories Do you have a good childhood memory about books and reading? Do you have an unpleasant memory? Tell the person next to you about both. It is the conditions and feelings associated with your good memory that should be recreated for reading with your child. It is likely that most positive responses will relate to being read to, at bedtime or at school. Negative memories are often associated with having to read aloud in class. Discuss the elements that made one memory pleasant and the other negative.

Reading Success in reading is fundamental to success in school. Reading is all about acquiring meaning; for enjoyment, information and understanding. It is not a performance. It is not a test. Every time you finish a book - do always choose a harder one next time? Most aspects of the curriculum rely upon reading to some extent;

Understanding (Comprehension) Being able to read does not mean you understand what you read. Your child might sound like a good reader but may not necessarily understand what the text means. The best way to develop understanding is to talk about texts. The next slide is easy to read – does anyone understand what it means?

An extract taken from a computer manual According to the previous ATA/IDE hard drive transfer protocol, the signalling way to send data was in synchronous strobe mode by using the rising edge of the strobe signal. The faster strobe rate increases EMI, which cannot be eliminated by the standard 40- pin cable used by ATA and ultra ATA. This slide shows that the ability to read aloud well is no indication of understanding. Reading comprehension has to be taught. Language has to be taught, defined, used and understood.

Reading requires two skills Understanding The ability to understand the meaning of the words and sentences in a text. The ability to understand the ideas, information and themes in a text. If a child understands what they hear, they will understand the same information when they read. Phonics and Word Recognition The ability to recognise words presented in and out of context. The ability to blend letter sounds (phonemes) together to read words.

What are phonics? 26 44 144 How many letters? How many sounds (phonemes)? How many spellings of the sounds? 26 44 144

Sounds Bouncy sounds Stretchy sounds Ask parents to sound out the alphabet – as sounds not names. They are likely to schwa – e.g fu not ffffffffff Talk about importance of not schwaing. If children schwa, they will hear an extra sound when they are trying to blend the word and then the word will not make sense. If children hear an extra sound, they may add this sound when spelling and therefore get the spelling wrong. Show Letters and Sounds DVD Phase 2 – enunciation video Ask parents to sound out their own names correctly – demonstrate.

Blending and Segmenting sh ar p sharp Explain what blending and segmenting mean. Emphasise the importance of blending for reading – recognising letter sounds (phonemes) means nothing if they cannot be blended for reading. Parents can help by playing oral blending games – sounding out words around the house and when out and about – and blending the letters together orally. E.g. Pass Mummy the c u p cup. Turn on the t a p tap. Touch your t oe s toes… Re emphasis the importance of not schwaring – short, crisp sounds are vital. Blending for reading and Segmenting for spelling

Reading at SJB The Teaching of Reading Phonics Shared reading Guided reading Independent reading Personal reading Focused reading activities Reading across the curriculum Class novels and stories School readers Home readers The hearing of reading is NOT the teaching of reading Give a brief overview of the function of each of the above aspects of treading in school. Explain that all of these are part of the teaching of reading. Explain that sometimes, as parents, there is an expectation that children are heard reading often. This may be the case for some, but not all children. The hearing of reading is not the same as the teaching of reading. Explain the school policy and expectations about home reading – in general. Details to follow,

Reading at Home – Enjoy! Make reading visible; have books available in your home Share books every day; Boys need to see that reading is something men do. Talk about books. Sit and listen - don’t do chores around the reader! Respect choices. Respect choices – reading the computer or comics or sports magazines is still reading.

What to do if your child is stuck Use phonics first. What sound does the word begin with? Can you say the sounds in the word? Blend them together. Read to the end of the sentence. What would make sense? What is the text about – what might fit here? Does it sound right? Look at the picture. Does it help? Talk through each strategy and explain what each will do to help the child decode a word that they cannot read. Independent Strategies by Jill Marie Warner

How to use these strategies at home John let his pet frog go. It ******across the grass. What is the first sound? It h***** across the grass. What would make sense? It hopping across the grass. Does that sound right? It hopped across the grass.

Closed Questions! What do you like about this book? Do you like this book? Do you like this character? It’s a good story isn’t it? Do you like reading? Are you good at reading? Do you like this kind of story? Change these questions so that the answers cannot be yes or no. What do you like about this book? What do you think of this character? Why do you think this is a good story? What’s great about reading? Why are you a good reader? What is it about these stories that you like so much? Briefly explain the difference between an open and a closed question. Explain that open questions will generate discussion which will lead to better understanding whereas closed question will only generate a one word answer. Click to reveal possible alternatives when the parents have had a go.

Understanding (Comprehension) Finding information on the page. Being able to find information that is not on the page. Looking for clues Thinking about situations and predicting what might happen. Putting yourself in a character’s shoes and understanding what is going on from their viewpoint. Book talk to make your child think.

You’re never too young! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qU97IXT8MIs Polar Bear Polar Bear http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qU97IXT8MIs This is two-minute film of a father reading to his baby. The baby has obviously heard the story many times and can distinguish between the text and the narrator. The patterns and the rhythms of the story are embedded and the baby knows when his father is reading and when he is making the animal noises. You will have to download this at home and burn onto a CD.

Have fun!!