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WHY READ ALOUD TO CHILDREN ? Mr. N.TENZIN Head Librarian “Children are made readers on the laps of their parents." Emilie Buchwald.

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Presentation on theme: "WHY READ ALOUD TO CHILDREN ? Mr. N.TENZIN Head Librarian “Children are made readers on the laps of their parents." Emilie Buchwald."— Presentation transcript:

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2 WHY READ ALOUD TO CHILDREN ? Mr. N.TENZIN Head Librarian “Children are made readers on the laps of their parents." Emilie Buchwald

3 WHAT IS READ ALOUD ? It is one of the most valuable gifts you can give your child. In the simple act of reading to children, you lay the foundation for their educational success.. “The single most important activity for building the knowledge required for eventual success in reading is reading aloud to children” ( Nation of Readers 1985) Reading aloud helps to develop a child’s early literacy. A read aloud is a planned oral reading of a book or print excerpt, usually related to a theme or topic of study.

4 DO YOU KNOW?  Kids who are read to, do better in school  Children who learn to read early are the ones who are read to by parents, siblings or other caregivers  A 5 year old child has a speaking vocabulary of approx. 2000 words  Child learns by imitation, if they see you read, they will too  Children like to read what they themselves choose to read, not what others choose for them  Students from Gr.3 to 12 learn about 3,000 new words a year. They learn the majority of new words incidentally while reading  Reading is an accrued skill

5 HourWeek Welfare:616 words61,000 words Working class:1,251 words125,000 words Professional:2,153 words215,000 words In a typical hour, the average child would hear: Hart & Risley, T.R. (1995)

6 BENEFITS OF READING ALOUD  Establishes a bond of love  Develops the child’s listening skills  Stimulates the child’s imagination, creativity and curiosity  Builds background knowledge and vocabulary  Develops the child’s attention span  Better performance in school  Appreciates a larger, richer world  Becomes a part of family heritage  Develops a life long love of reading

7 TIPS FOR RAISING READERS Furnish your home with a variety of reading materials Take your children to the library and bookstore and give them the opportunity to choose their own books Make reading aloud a natural part of your family activity Set a regular reading time with your child and make it a routine, it becomes a habit later Limit your children’s TV viewing in an effort to make time to other activities, but never use TV as reward for reading. Be a role model

8 TIPS FOR RAISING READERS Read 20 minutes everyday and see the positive effects Reading to children at bedtime often works well. Books are very relaxing and give the child happy thoughts before they sleep Parent’s patience is enormously important, we cannot raise the readers overnight Some children love reading about the same characters, if that is what your child likes, choose several short books in a series or a longer chapter book When your child is in Gr.4-6 encourage them to read informational and biography books

9 BOOK HANDLING SKILLS Hold the baby in your lap; make sure he or she can see the pictures Hold a book right side up Model left to right directionality Introduce the book: read the title, author, and illustrator; look at the cover; talk about what the book might be about Run your finger under the text, while reading Point out punctuation Turn pages at the appropriate time when the story is being read

10 HOW TO READ ALOUD Prepare  Preview the book before you read it to the children  Book selection is very important. Think about your child’s age, development level and interests. That will help you choose the book and what questions you want to ask.. Before You Read a Story  Make sure everyone is comfortable  Show the cover and read the title, Author & Illustrator of the book  Give some hints about the book  Ask some of these questions: What do you think this book is about? Have you ever read any thing similar to this book? Make predictions based on what you see in the book

11 HOW TO READ ALOUD During a story  Use stopping point  Change your voice to fit the mood or action  Add information or change words to understand more words and explain the meaning of new words  Ask the child to make predictions about the plot, the characters, and the setting  Allow the child to ask questions or make comments  Share your own thoughts about the story After you read a story  What was your favorite part of the story & why?  What did you like best about the story?  Did you like how the book ended?  If you could write a new ending, what would it be?

12 THE DO’s and DON’Ts of READ-ALOUD DO’s  Begin reading as young as possible  Use rhymes and songs to stimulate infant’s language and listening  Read and reread predictable/repetitive books  Allow your child to insert key words/phrases when rereading  Insert your child’s name and family members’ names in books  Start with picture books, and books with few sentences on the page then gradually move to books with more and more text and build to chapter books, informational books and novels.  Allow your child to get involved (hold book, turn pages etc.)  If you are reading a picture book, make sure the children can see the picture easily and talk about the picture  If the chapter is long or if you don’t have time each day to finish an entire chapter, find a suspenseful spot at which to stop. Leave the audience hanging; they will be counting the minutes until the next reading

13 THE DO‘s and DON’TS of READ-ALOUD Don'ts  Read stories that you don’t enjoy. Your dislike will show in the reading  Continue a book that is a poor choice  Select a book that many children have heard or seen on television  Be fooled by awards. They don’t guarantee good read aloud  Choose books that are heavy with dialogues as they are difficult for reading aloud and listening  Read when your child is irritated

14 “Read me a story, Please mama read me to sleep.” “But what kind of story, my dear?” “Read any story and I will go to sleep, As long as I know you are near.” “You may have tangible wealth untold; caskets of jewels and coffers of gold. Richer than I you can never be I had a mother who read to me”. By Strickland Gillilan

15 SUCCESS STORY Dear Mom, You did so many things for me when I was growing up. May be the ones I remember best seemed pretty ordinary to you-like reading to me every night in bed. I remember thinking that Dr. Seuss taught me what loyalty was when Horton sat on those eggs to hatch them. Henry Huggins and Nancy Drew seemed like kids down the street. You made me feel important and loved with everything you did. For all times I forgot to tell you then, thanks, Mom. Janie Dear Mom, When you read to us, I just took it for granted. Now that I have my own children, I find that I’m doing the same thing. Its sort of like handling down the “magic” Magic of reading, When we pass on our love of books. It's a torch passed from one generation to the next. Merry

16 STAGES OF READING Talk with babies Use gesture/Print awareness / Labeling Touch and feel books/picture books Stories with animals that talk/pop up books Chapter books/informational book/Biography Fairy tales/folk tales

17 Conclusion S pend countless hours of quality, enjoyable time with your children. You light their reading fire and turn them in to life long readers and life long learners. If we work together, our combined expertise and enthusiasm could make every home a reading home and every child a reader.

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