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Dear Arizona Promising Practices Subscriber,
Welcome
to another online addition of the Arizona Promising Practices forum. For those
new to this service, each issue, which will now be sent to you on a regular
basis, will focus on:
(1)
Recommended National Educational Websites; and
(2) One
promising practice article in condensed form. We welcome your recommendations
for improvement to this forum or suggestions on future topics (these will be
wide ranging so if nothing in this update interests you, hold on for future editions!) The Arizona Promising Practices Forum and website, www.azpromisingpractices.com
is a FREE resource of the Arizona Department of Education.
In
this issue the Promising Practices Forum we have been asked to provide
additional resources that educators can provide to parents to assist their
children in learning to read well. Brought to you by the United States
Department of Education, this helpful guide can be shared with parents and
educators alike in helping children grasp the concepts of reading.
National
Website of Importance – If
you are looking for a way to launch young readers into the world of reading,
zoom over to Reading Rockets at www.readingrockets.org
This website is loaded with valuable advice on reading for teachers, students,
and parents.
Promising
Practice Research and Teaching Tips
Educator
advice to parents on assisting students with reading.
A Reading Checklist -- Helping Your Child Become
a Reader
There are many ways that you can encourage your child to
become a reader. Here are some questions that you can ask yourself to make sure
that you are keeping on track:
For
Babies (6 weeks to 1 year)
- Do
I provide a comfortable place for our story time? Is my child happy to be in
this place?
- Am
I showing my child the pictures in the book? Am I changing the tone of my
voice as I read to show emotion and excitement?
- Am
I paying attention to how my child responds? What does she especially like?
Is she tired and ready to stop?
All
of the questions above, plus:
- Does
my child enjoy the book we are reading?
- Do
I encourage my child to "pretend read," joining in where he has
memorized a word or phrase?
- When
I ask questions, am I giving my child enough time to think and answer?
- Do
I tie ideas in the book to things that are familiar to my child? Do I notice
if he does this on his own?
- Do
I let my child know how much I like his ideas and encourage him to tell me
more?
- Do
I point out letters, such as the first letter of his name?
For
Preschoolers (3 and 4 years)
All
of the questions above, plus:
- Do I find ways to help my child
begin to identify sounds and letters and to make letter-sound matches?
For
Kindergartners (5 years):
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Remember:
Children learn step by step in a process that takes time and
patience. They vary a great deal in what holds their interest and in
the rate at which they make progress.
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All
of the questions above, plus:
- Do
I find ways to help my child begin to identify some printed words?
- Do
I let my child retell favorite stories to show that she knows how the story
develops and what's in it?
For
Beginning First-Graders (6 years):
All
of the questions above, plus:
- Do
I give my child the chance to read a story to me using the print, picture
clues, his memory—or any combination of these ways that help him make
sense of the story?
From
birth to age 3, most babies and toddlers become able to:
- Make sounds that imitate the
tones and rhythms that adults use when talking.
- Respond to gestures and facial
expressions.
- Begin to associate words they
hear frequently with what the words mean.
- Make cooing, babbling sounds in
the crib, which gives way to enjoying rhyming and nonsense word games with a
parent or caregiver.
- Play along in games such as
"peek-a-boo" and "pat-a-cake."
- Handle objects such as board
books and alphabet blocks in their play.
- Recognize certain books by
their covers.
- Pretend to read books.
- Understand how books should be
handled.
- Share books with an adult as a
routine part of life.
- Name some objects in a book.
- Talk about characters in books.
- Look at pictures in books and
realize they are symbols of real things.
- Listen to stories.
- Ask or demand that adults read
or write with them.
- Begin to pay attention to
specific print such as the first letters of their names.
- Scribble with a purpose (trying
to write or draw something).
- Produce some letter-like forms
and scribbles that resemble, in some way, writing.
From
ages 3-4, most preschoolers become able to:
- Enjoy listening to and talking
about storybooks.
- Understand that print carries a
message.
- Make attempts to read and
write.
- Identify familiar signs and
labels.
- Participate in rhyming games.
- Identify some letters and make
some letter-sound matches.
- Use known letters (or their
best attempt to write the letters) to represent written language especially
for meaningful words like their names or phrases such as "I love
you."
At
age 5, most kindergartners become able to:
- Sound as if they are reading
when they pretend to read.
- Enjoy being read to.
- Retell simple stories.
- Use descriptive language to
explain or to ask questions.
- Recognize letters and
letter-sound matches.
- Show familiarity with rhyming
and beginning sounds.
- Understand that print is read
left-to-right and top-to-bottom.
- Begin to match spoken words
with written ones.
- Begin to write letters of the
alphabet and some words they use and hear often.
- Begin to write stories with
some readable parts.
At
age 6, most first-graders can:
- Read and retell familiar
stories.
- Use a variety of ways to help
with reading a story such as rereading, predicting what will happen, asking
questions, or using visual cues or pictures.
- Decide on their own to use
reading and writing for different purposes;
- Read some things aloud with
ease.
- Identify new words by using
letter-sound matches, parts of words and their understanding of the rest of
a story or printed item.
- Identify an increasing number
of words by sight.
- Sound out and represent major
sounds in a word when trying to spell.
- Write about topics that mean a
lot to them.
- Try to use some punctuation
marks and capitalization.
http://www.ed.gov/parents/academic/help/reader/part8.html
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