Friday 14 February 2014

Test Post 1


Learning to read is such a big milestone.

It is the gateway to the life long joy of reading.

But boy, oh boy can it make us anxious!

Most of us are completely confused about what we should be doing and when ...

... and get into a spin about not pushing kids too fast but worrying they're behind ...

... 'cos some kid we know was reading at 2!

I'm a big convert to phonics and love the phonics programme ... Reading Eggs ... that my daughter uses.


But my "oh now I get it" moment was recognising reading involved a whole bunch of different skills and that different kids master these skills in different orders at different ages.


Reading Skills


It really helped me to break reading ... and pre-reading ... down into these 9 skills ...

  1. Recognise Shapes
  2. Recognise Rhyme
  3. Passionate About Stories
  4. A Big Vocabulary
  5. Obsessed with Information
  6. Fine Motor Skills
  7. Story Telling
  8. Great Listening
  9. Willing to Repeat & Repeat & Repeat

I found it much, much easier to help my daughter once I unbundled all of these skills and thought about the very different activities through which we could nurture them.

It became simpler to recognise the progress she was making even before she could read.

And it just made our activities lots more fun!

And even now she is learning to read with phonics it really helps me to remember these different skills and make sure I am spending time supporting all of them in fun ways.


Educational Games for 2-6 Year Olds


1. Recognise Shapes


Shape recognition is at the heart of reading.

Some kids find it a doddle but others ... particularly dyslexic kids ... struggle.

Offering plenty of fun shape matching from when kids are small is essential ... shape sorters and stackers are great for this ... but don't complicate it.

Matching the shape is what's important, not knowing it's called a hexagon.

Between 1 and 2 many kids can match complex shapes including letters & numbers in lift out alphabet and number puzzles.

Once they can it's easy to start pushing the sounds or the names of the numbers.

DON'T!! Just do more and more shape matching & make it a bit trickier.

Simple games of snap are a great idea ... you can make your own cards. 

You can include letters in snap, but the important skill is spotting tricky shape matches e.g. d & b, m & w, u & n not the names or sounds of the letters.



2. Recognise Rhyme


Littlies love rhyme even before they can talk.

And a love of rhyme will help kids recognise sounds & words families once they start reading.

Reading fun rhyming stories ... like those from Julia DonaldsonLynley Dodd ... from when kids are very small will give them them loads of practice in hearing common sounds.


Creativity kits for kids!


3. Passionate About Stories


Reading comes quickly to some kids, but to most it doesn't.

A passion for stories will keep kids wanting to read even when it's hard.

Reading amazing stories to kids from when they are tiny is a no brainer

But it's really, really important to keep it up when they start learning to read. If a child is used to listening to Fantastic Mr Fox or Charlie & the Chocolate Factory, their reading book won't cut it as a bedtime story.

Kids will resent reading practice if it means missing out on stories they love. So do reading practice downstairs and save bed time for something more fun.



4. A Big Vocabulary



Fluent reading needs a big vocabulary.

And the easiest way for kids to learn big words is to hear them in conversation or stories.

I always remembered soporific meant sleep inducing when I was small because Beatrix Potter described the lettuce the Flopsy bunnies ate before they fell asleep as soporific ;-)

Our kids learnt to speak in the first place by hearing words they didn't understand, so don't be afraid to use big words or read "stretch" books with words they don't know.




5. Obsessed With Information



Most kids are inspired to read and to keep reading by brilliant stories.

But kids also love facts.

And some kids would rather hear about tractors or space than listen to a story.

Tapping into these obsessions can really motivate some kids to practice reading.

Finding pictures they can label with simple decodable words or learning a few sight words about things they really care about gives them the promise that reading practice is worth it.


Creative Products for Art and Education


6. Fine Motor Skills


I simplistically thought reading simple sounds & words always came before writing.

My daughter educated me on this ;-)

Way before she could read, she'd get people to spell words so she could write them down. I know other pre-readers who love copying out letters.

On the other hand I know other kids who are totally bored by "mark making" activities and who even as readers struggle writing basic letters.

It obviously good to offer even tiny kids lots of mark making activities.

But some kids will get more from other fine motor play ... if you're looking for inspiration In Lieu of Pre-School has a list of other 200 fun fine motor activities.



7. Story Telling


Part of reading is understanding the pattern and logic of sentences and stories. 

Listening to stories is obviously the most important way kids learn this.

But telling stories is also a brilliant way for pre-readers & readers to practice for themselves.

We have enormous fun telling stories with our puppet theatre but just setting aside time at bedtime to tell stories as well as to listen to them is really valuable.

Or let them create their own books by dictating stories to you.


For Small Hands


8. Great Listening


Good listening is actually key when kids start to read for themselves.

To sound out words they have to listen to the sounds much more actively than they do when they are listening to a story supported by pictures.

Picture books are obviously brilliant but it really helps kids to hear words if they are used to listening to stories without pictures.

So it's a good idea from when kids are small to make up stories for them and as they get older to have some of the great kids classics like Roald Dahl as audio books.



9. Willing to Repeat & Repeat & Repeat


There comes a point when kids are ready to learn to read systematically.

They might be 3 and they might be 6!

However old they are, it has to involve an awful lot of repetition.

For some kids the prospect of independent reading just isn't enough reward.

Finding lots of different ways to practice sounds and then word families helps.

But for a lot of kids a reward structure of some kind helps.

We love the Reading Eggs programme and my daughter happily spends time on it every day but an awful lot of her motivation comes from collecting another egg with a creature inside :-)

You can obviously create your own rewards but if you think your child is ready to learn to read and you want to find an online programme check out my list of suggestions here.



If you enjoyed this post check out my other reading posts &  follow me on Pinterest ...

Follow Mums make lists ...'s board Reading on Pinterest.


And for more tips check out the links from other bloggers below ... and do share your own ...

More Learn to Read Tips


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