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Reading Practice
As
with any new skill, the more you practice the better you
become. Just like learning to ride a bike, reading also
needs to be practiced. Parents can help!
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Read to and with your child every day.
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Ask questions about what is being read to make sure your
child understands
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Rereading stories and books is fine.
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Take your child to the library and stay awhile to read
together (then borrow more books to take home).
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Make reading a priority in your home.
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Remember, you are your child's most important teacher.
Children learn to do what you do!
When
Your Child Comes To An Unknown Word
Often
adults tell a child to "sound out" an unknown word.
Frequently that prompt is successful and the word is
decoded. When sounding it out doesn't work, adults usually
tell the word and reading continues.
However, our goal is to help children become independent
readers. Here are some alternative suggestions for parents
or "homework helpers" to use when your child confronts an
unknown word:
Guess the Covered Word Strategy
(From Four-Blocks Literacy Model developed by Pat Cunningham
and Dorothy Hall)
This is a strategy we practice in class. It teaches
students to ask three questions when they find an unknown
word. Cover the word to keep you place (use your finger or
a small sticky paper).
Some
Other Things To Try
Wait
5-10 seconds to see what attempts are made. Ask: "What
would make sense there?"
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Use the picture to help figure out the word.
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Skip the word and continue reading to end of line
or sentence.
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Go back and read sentence again.
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If the word was on a previous page, go back and try to
find it
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Look for a smaller word in a big one.
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Cover the ending (-ed, -ing) with your finger and try
word.
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Look how the word begins. Let the sound "pop" right out.
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Help with blending (sounding it out).
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Tell the word and keep on reading.
It is
important that children learn to use these strategies
independently. When your child "figures out" a word, you
might ask how he/she did it. Telling about their reading
helps to reinforce learning. |