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What are some ways I can help y child learn to read and become Proficient Readers?

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Presentation on theme: "What are some ways I can help y child learn to read and become Proficient Readers?"— Presentation transcript:

1 What are some ways I can help y child learn to read and become Proficient Readers?

2 Read to your child daily Talk to your child using correct grammar Enroll your child in an early preventions program and or pre-school program. What can I do as a parent? By age three your child may show large gaps in vocabulary He/she may have difficulty understanding information. He/she may have difficulty speaking in coherent sentences. What happens if I do not have conversations with my child?

3 WHAT CAN I DO?  P is for practice.  I is for Intensity  C is Cross-training  A is Adaptively  M is Motivation and Attention

4  Practice: Builds neuron pathways in your child’s brain by repeated exposer to a skill.  Intensity: Builds neuron support by intense focus  Cross-training: Brings together different skills such as language, fluency, and comprehension  Adaptively: Expose new skills just above your child's reading level. Not too easy, yet not too hard.  Motivation: Teach your child with high interesting activities to keep their attention.

5 -Read to your child -Talk to your child -Sing with your child -Give your child the opportunity to carry on child to adult conversations.

6  In the beginning, children learn vocabulary from their parents by listening to them talk, listening to stories and songs, and having child to adult conversations. As children grow they continue to develop vocabulary in these ways, but as the vocabulary becomes more difficult, they may need help to make vocabulary meaningful so it can be stored into memory. - Continue to read, read, read -Keep in mind the capacity of the working memory and focus on only a few words at a time. -Have your child draw pictures to describe new vocabulary -Talk about new vocabulary and relate it to something that your child already knows about *(Schema) Read books incorporating vocabulary and themes of interest.

7 - Children can practice clapping the syllables in words. - Children can practice counting the number of words in a sentence by repeating a given sentence and jumping each time they say a new word. - Parents can show children picture cards and ask their child to tell them the beginning, middle, or ending sound of the picture.

8 - Read nursery rhymes and rhyming books to your child. - Get a variety of pictures that rhyme and put them on 3 by 5 cards. Make sure that you have at least 10 different sets of rhyming pictures. Then have your child try to find the pictures that go together. - Sing *Raffi’s Willoughby Wallaby song using family members names. As they start to understand the song switch from Willoughby, Wallaby to Silloughby Sallaby and so on until you have practiced many different letter sounds.

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10 Go Fish!

11 - Play a guess my word game. Using CVC words * Uncover each letter one at a time and let your child say the letter sounds until they have all 3 sounds so they can blend them together. -Read with your child and help them practice sounding out unknown words. You can also pretend that you are stuck on reading certain words and ask your child to help you sound it out. This will help your child learn how to use the decoding strategy when he starts to read on his own. -Take magnet letters and create words by moving letters around and then blending the sounds together. Allow inventive spelling. This builds confidence, and letter sound correspondence. Read decodable text with letter sound combinations introduced.

12 -Play a game making nonsense words by adding ing and ed to a variety of words. Talk about whether or not you made a real or a pretend word. -Go through magazines and find 2 to 3 words that have smaller word parts in them. Glue these words to a piece of paper then write a sentence and draw a picture using each of the words you found. -Using a newspaper play a word hunt game and highlight as many words as you can find in 3 minutes that have word parts like ing, ed, s, re, tion, un, etc.

13  If children develop good oral comprehension skills through listening to their parents talk, sing, and read stories, then they will be more likely to have good reading comprehension skills as well. -Have a purpose for reading. Read to your child and ask questions about the stories (Who, What, When, Why, and How ?’s) -Talk to your children and allow them to carry on conversations with you in their own words. -Help your child to learn new vocabulary by playing Balderdash * Help your child form mental images and then illustrate parts of the book.

14 -Take a sentence and mix up the order of the words. Have your child read the sentence and draw a picture of it. Mix the words up again and repeat the process. Compare the two sentences and pictures to see how they are different (example The hat is on the cat. The cat is on the hat.) -Take a sentence out of your favorite story. Write the words on a strip of paper and cut them out. Then take the words and see if there is another way to put your words together to make a sentence. Illustrate the new meaning of your sentence. -Read stories and listen to songs to expose your child to the structure of sentences.

15 -Play memory games with your child, like concentration to help build your child’s memory skills. -Build your child’s background knowledge by reading books, communicating, and exploring the world around you. -Create songs and draw pictures about things that are important to remember.

16 Chunking Because working memory has limited capacity, as reading occurs, words and word parts such past tense, are stored as chunks form into folders and merge together for understanding. Gist Working memory stores chunked information for a few minutes and then is replaced by each gist component i.e., Chunks, clauses, sentences, paragraphs, chapters for comprehension. Transfer If a child shows interest and comprehension occurs, a child activates already formed gists, from long term memory to transfer information to years compared to minutes.

17 Immediate memory lasts about 30 seconds. Working memory has limited space and duration. Short- Term Memory Connect prior knowledge before reading. Repeated exposure to skills for retention Help make connections through motivation and high interest topics. Long- Term Memory

18 - Make lists to help you organize your thoughts. -Read about different topics and talk about how these topics relate to similar topics that you already know about. -Look at pictures before reading the text to get your mind thinking about words that relate to the pictures in the story.

19 - Read together and discuss words that your child does not know. Are there any clues in the story that can tell you what the word means? -Read sentences from different stories, but leave one word out. See if your child can guess what word might be missing after reading all of the other words. -Pull a random word out of the dictionary and write a sentence using it. See if your child can figure out what your word means. Then have your child find a word and write a sentence to see if you can figure out what his word means.

20 -Practice sight words by playing sight word go fish. -Read to and with your child by pointing to each word. -Read and talk to your child to help develop greater vocabulary skills.

21 -Practice reading the same text over and over. This may seem boring to you, but to a beginning reader it is exciting because they feel more and more successful every time they read it. -Take a picture walk and talk about the pictures before you read. This helps your child build some of the vocabulary that they might need to read the text. -Have conversations with your child. When children can fluently carry on oral conversations, they become better readers. I can read!

22 -When you read aloud to your child occasionally make a mistake, fix it, go back and reread it again. As you model this behavior, your child sees that it is alright to make mistakes and fix them instead of skipping over it. -Once in awhile you can ask your child “Does that make sense?” when they read a word incorrectly. You will not want to do this all of the time with beginning readers because they will get frustrated, but once in awhile can be helpful.

23 Chard, D. J. and Dickson, S. V. (1999). Phonological Awareness: Instructional and Assessment Guidelines. LD Online. May 29, 2012 from http://www.ldonline.org/article/6254/http://www.ldonline.org/article/6254/ Gay, D. (n.d.). How to Communicate With Your Baby. Ivillage. May 28, 2012 from http://www.ivillage.co.uk/how-communicate-your- baby/82048 Ideal Curriculum. (2009). Oral Language Development, the Foundation of Literacy. May 28, 2012 from http://www.idealcurriculum.com/oral-language- development.html Kididdles. Willoughby Wallaby Song. May 28, 2012 from http://www.kididdles.com/lyrics/w120.html Nemours. Reading Books to Babies. May 28, 2012 from http://kidshealth.org/parent/growth/learning/reading_babies.ht ml Sousa, D. A. (2005). How the Brain Learns to Read. California: Corwin Press.


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