| Curious George series and Babar books! |
Same here. And book of Jokes by Rosie O Donald. My kid is a writer though, and I am teaching him how to search the internet for things. We are working on a biography project. |
| Bridge To Terabithia |
How much is he/she complaining about it? |
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The first two words of your response are responsive to the question. The rest was to somehow make your kid look brighter notwithstanding the book selection. |
True, but the vast majority of kids selected for AAP are advanced readers. The gifted, dyslexic kids most likely have advanced comprehension and are probably enjoying some great audio books. |
I would not say there vast majority are advanced readers, reading issues are too prevalent. Yes, I would hope all children with dyslexia have access to audio books and are utilizing them. Comprehension is different from the mechanics of reading and is more closely aligned with intelligence. |
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Wonder
Out of My Mind Greek Gods Greek Heroes |
Dp. I read that in sixth grade and cried and cried! Would not let my 8 yo read it until at least 6th. |
Wel, they are special children, so it should come as no surprise to you that they have special reading needs. |
+1. This is where my (now TJ) kid was between second and third. Had read his way through more modern books. We were looking for books that were advanced for a 9 year old, but didn’t advanced content/ adult themes. The children’s classics were great. Not sure if it is still a thing, but we used Lexiles to help out. https://lexile.com/ Looks up the Lexiles of the books that had been a good match for DC. Then looked at what else was at that Lexile for ideas. For example, if your DD loves Heidi, you can look it up and see that the unabridged version is 1200L. Then you can see that other books 1100L to 1300L appropriate for an age range 8-11 include Gullivers Travels and Lemony Snickett and Little Women. |
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Who Was series
Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales |
| Nothing. Giving her a mental break before the school year starts. |
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It's all self-directed, we aren't making her do much of anything other than enjoy her summer. She's reading some of the Harry Potter, something called The Little Prince, not sure where she got that one. Bad Kitty. A few others. We had bought her the Junie B. Jones series last year but she seems to have outgrown them. I wanted to make sure she got a dose of my childhood so we bought her the Ramona Quimby books as well.
I think she's somewhat advanced reading, but she isn't Matilda, pouring over Nicholas Nickleby at age 8 or anything. |