Reading with your child Help them to get the Speedwell Reading Challenge!

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Writer’s Workshop By Mrs. Hicks.
Advertisements

Your Child As A Reader.
BY DONNA WILLIAMS EIP TEACHER ANNISTOWN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL.
Reading at Auriol.
Supporting Your Child with their Reading
Reading At Home With Your Child. When parents help their children learn to read, they help open the door to a new world. Fiona Wilkinson.
Reading with your child.. Starting to Read When children learn to read they draw on all the different kinds of information they have gathered about books.
Valuing Identity - Early Years conference
KS1 With Miss Parker and Mrs Martin
Reading How can you help your children to learn to read?
Reading at St Joseph’s. Aims of today To explain how we teach reading. To introduce Read, Write, Inc. Sample ‘Speed sound’ session. To share some practical.
Welcome to our Spring Term 2013 Mrs Taylors class.
Rochsolloch Primary Pupil Voice. We asked… Do you think there is an adult in the school whom you could speak to if you had a worry?
HOME READING IN ONE /TWO. READING SHOULD BE FUN!!!! Our number one priority is to ensure reading is a positive and enjoyable experience for students and.
Helping your child with reading. 10 Top Tips.. Research shows that reading to your child and hearing your child read is the most important thing you can.
Supporting reading at home Parents information talk Bagshot Infant School Tuesday 8 th January 2012.
Bishop Loveday CE Primary School Help Your Child with Reading Year Six.
Supporting Your Child With Literacy Development By Ciara James.
Brain Builders. Our aim To improve the quality and effectiveness of homework tasks. To extend learning by linking homework to activities completed in.
Curriculum Evening How can you help at home? March 2013.
Help Your Child with Reading
Brain Builders An new approach to providing effective homework at Crawford Village Primary School.
Aims of session Making reading fun Early reading Developing reading
Talk, Read, Write … Skills for School Pre-Schoolers “Research shows that pre-school children who are exposed to plenty of language (books and conversation)
Bishop Loveday CE Primary School Help your child with reading Year Five.
September  water bottles every day (own fruit may be brought for playtime)  PE kits and all items of uniform must have name labels.  book bags.
Oral Production Year 2 R.H. Davis. Our book Topics  Chapter 6 Video Games  Chapter 7 Good mood foods  Chapter 8 An Ice Place to Stay  Chapter 9 Staying.
Parent Workshop- September 5 th, am.. “Until I feared I would lose it, I never loved to read. One does not love breathing” Harper Lee.
Reception Reading Meeting. We aim to cover:  Reading  Parental involvement  Phonics.
Reading in the EYFS How to support your child at home.
Parent Reading Workshop Reception classes Wednesday 16 th September Help us to help your child become a brilliant reader!
October 15 th  Introduction  Importance of reading  Teaching of Phonics at OPIS  Teaching of Reading at OPIS  How Parents can support reading.
How To Help in Early Years
Speaking and Listening Speaking and listening are vital skills children need to develop in order to live successful lives in our world. They are key skills.
Boomerang Book Bags. Magazine Cover Reading with your child Reading together every day and having fun with stories will make your child a more confident.
1 Reading Presentation November Aims of presentation To inform you about what we do at school To enable parents to better support children’s reading.
A Guide To Reading At Home With Your Child. Introduction At Oak Tree Primary School we know how important it is for teachers and parents to work together.
Reading at home. For early readers, reading daily at home is vital for supporting progress across the curriculum. Reading from a child's reading scheme.
READING.  Words are all around us – in signs, in newspapers, in timetables – so reading is a vital skill we need to provide our children with so that.
Paired Reading Presentation of Certificates January 9th 2014.
Reading with your child - information parents
Family What is a family? There is no fixed recipe for a family; just a group of people who love and care for one another. Love and care are the most.
Mearns Primary Reading Guidance for Parents. Reading aloud to your child Research has shown that reading aloud to children of all ages helps them to develop.
As a parent, you play a critical role in your child's education during the summer — especially if your child has dyslexia. Without your help, kids are.
Growth Mindsets at Long Crendon The Story So Far Monday 29 th February 2016.
Helping your child read at home. Reading schemes are developed in conjunction with literacy experts. KS1 books are written with a mix of high-frequency.
Bumble Bee Class Supporting Your Child with Reading 15 th January 2015.
Supporting Children with Speech, Language and Communication Needs (SLCN) Monday 21 st March Emily Alderson – Speech and Language Therapist.
Reading. Why is it important? “ Reading for pleasure is the single biggest factor in success later in life, outside of an education. Study after study.
Bumble Bee Class Supporting Your Child with Reading 4 th February 2016.
Tips For Being a Successful Reader Promoting Family Literacy.
Willow Class Meet the Teacher Ms Bamford Mrs Day.
M Meet the Teacher Evening Wednesday 16 th September 2015.
First and foremost, support and reassure your child that there is nothing to worry about and that they should always just try their best. Praise and encourage!
Bumble Bee Class Supporting Your Child with Reading 2nd February 2017
Home-School Connection: Promoting Writers
How we teach our children to read
Year 1 Curriculum Evening
Decoding and phonics What comes next?
Helping your child read at home
Reading in P1.
Make This Valentine's Day More Special For Your Sweetheart!
Year 2 Curriculum meeting
It’s more then just reading
How we teach our children to read
Tips for being a good mentor:
Book sharing in Nursery
7th February 2019 Kirsten Taylor & Sinead McEwan
Kiveton Park Infant School School Parliament
Reception Home Learning Grid Spring
Presentation transcript:

Reading with your child Help them to get the Speedwell Reading Challenge!

Sharing books does not just mean reading together. Sharing books means; A cosy cuddle. Lots of talking. Learning to choose. Gaining confidence Laughing together. …and learning to read

A cosy cuddle It is important that you are both in the mood to share a book together. Sharing books should be something to look forward to – it should not be a task which you feel you have to do.

Sharing a book is a great opportunity to talk together. Talk about the cover of the book, the pictures, what kind of book it is and guess what might happen. Lots of talking

Why did you choose this book? Don’t worry about how easy or difficult it is – discover what made it special. Perhaps the cover looked interesting, but the story is not so good after all. What will you choose next time? Learning to choose

Everyone needs confidence. Children try things out for themselves, they need your support in order to succeed. Praise and encourage all the successes, but do not worry about mistakes. Gaining confidence

Fun things are much easier to learn. Laughing together can help overcome difficulties and mistakes but don’t laugh at the mistakes. Bring stories to life with funny voices – your child will love listening! Laughing together

Read to your child as often as possible even when they read well. Talk about the story. Encourage your child to read different material, like newspapers, magazines, comics, adverts… Learning to read

The Speedwell Reading Challenge Each time you read with your child at home please write your name in their Home School reading record book. You could add a comment about how well they read. You could add a sticker or a star or a smiley face to encourage your child. When your child has read 30 times at home they get a prize from Mrs Hicks or Mrs Ridsdale. Their name is written in the special book which is displayed in the entrance hall. Their photograph is taken in Gold Award assembly. At the end of the year all children that have achieved the challenge are entered into a prize draw. Please help your child to learn to read.