Reading Ages 4-6
Make Sure the Child
Sees the Text
Today's Snack:
Serve your child a bowl of cereal, and let the child read the back of the box.
If needed, you can read it for your child. Go over the ingredients list, too.
It's always great to pronounce words aloud that your child can see written as
text, so that your child makes that sound-symbol correspondence that is so
important for early reading success. Show your child how important reading can
be wherever words are found!
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Supplies:
A good bedtime story from a library,
school or bookstore
Children
in preschool and kindergarten need to be read to daily. But it's a mistake to
hold the book so that only you can see the words, and your child is elsewhere,
staring off into space or playing with a toy on the ground, etc.
The
child needs to be right next to you, paying attention to the story, and looking
at the written text while listening to the words being decoded.
Think about it: children spend so much time in text-free
environments. They listen to other household members and respond, but they
don't see the words that they hear and say. They watch television, and while
they hear words, they don't see any written out.
They need to be associating meaning with the visual effects
of words on the page.
They
need to see how words are read from left to right.
They
need to understand that pages of text are read from top to bottom.
If
they don't know these things, they will be at a disadvantage for building a
solid vocabulary in the years to come, and might be at higher risk for reading
disabilities.
So when you read aloud to your child, sit parallel with
the child so that you both can see both the words and the illustrations. It
doesn't matter if you sit up straight in a chair, or lay back on your child's
bed. Just as long as you and your child are both looking at the pages, you're
reading aloud right.
It's
OK every once in a while to point to certain words, or follow along with your
index finger as you read. But don't overdo the "lesson" part of the read-aloud
process. The whole idea is to patiently and casually model what reading is all
about. Reading is supposed to be fun, not work. It's amazing how much good
"play" can do, when you "play" smart.
Help your child become familiar with how words look and
work . . . and it will be fun for both of you as your child goes on to be a
great reader.