| Try those chaste Amish romances. |
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They don’t, and your kid will just have to get used to it. My kids were not as precocious as yours, but in early elementary, they liked books by Roald Dahl, CS Lewis, and Lloyd Alexander (Chronicles of Prydain). One loved Harry Potter and World War II books, particularly The Longest Day by Cornelius Ryan, the other was scared by HP but loved The Hobbit, the Flicka series, the Redwall books by Brian Jacques, and Watership Down. They both enjoyed Animal Farm and The Hounds pf the Morrigan. Later on their reading became more Isaac Asimov and Michael Crichton.
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Me again. My point is to let them read whatever they damm well like
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| Lots of non-fiction options out there that are age appropriate. Dinosaurs, who robots function, how are things made, etc. Take them to a library and look. |
| There are a lot of books about Legos that he may like. Agree with pp on the National Geographic stuff. Check out Ranger Rick too. And maybe the Dogman books? |
+2 Reading level is unrelated to subject matter and what the child should be reading. Reading level is just a school-based diagnostic. Leave that to teachers for in school purposes. Your child can already read well enough, so your goal is to keep the child interested in the subject of the books at home. Level is 100% irrelevant to your home book selection. I agree that picture books and other books meant for adults to read to kids are great for this age and particularly good for early readers. Bear in mind that at school the teacher will be introducing and using books for different reasons, so don't get bent out of shape if they seem 'too easy' for your child. Read the harder books at home. |
| Look at the Hoagies website for gifted kids. I had a 4 year old that also read at that level. I let him read whatever he choses, which (he is now 7) is still Captain Underpants, Dog Man, etc. I get higher level practice in there by having him assemble things with the directions, cook, etc. Just because he CAN read something doens't mean he WANTS to. Don't squash his fire by forcing higher level texts. |
| Right...he can read well so I would not give a thought to the reading level. Let him pick what ever he wants at the bookstore or library. No reason not to enjoy the Cat in the Hat or A Snowy Day just because you learned to read early. |
| Have you tried the Magic Tree House series? My preschooler is an advanced and voracious reader and these are very enjoyable. |
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OP I had a similar issue and I know that it seems like you need to be sure your kid keeps progressing in their reading level. They don’t, I promise. It’s okay if they stay at a sixth grade level for a while, as long as they keep trading books they enjoy.
But as I said above I think hatchet kight be a good option. |
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Hatchet is too old for a preschooler -- even the tamer "My side of the Mountain" is about a boy running away from home and living on his own. Those are meant for older kids.
OP, the fabulous advice I got was this: there is a window of time for the magic of certain levels of children's books -- don't miss it because you were pushing the child to read books meant for older kids. Your child will read those when older, but will never want to go back and read the wonderful literature meant for little ones. Stay in the little kids section of the library for a while longer yet. You won't be getting back there. |
+1 Also, as our children's librarian said, "Picture books is a genre, not a reading level." Many of them have beautiful artwork, lovely stories, and even advanced vocabulary. |
My early and advanced reader ADORED Elephant and Piggie. She also liked Knuffle Bunny, Frog & Toad, and the Frances books. Were they hard for her to read? No. But they were funny, and pitched right at her emotional level, and she became a delightfully expressive reader because of them. |
I second this. The "easy" books are school are used to develop and test comprehension skills like prediction or understanding cause and effect. At home, our approach was to let her read what she liked, occasionally suggesting or leaving out books that were more challenging in terms of reading levels, but more emphasizing reading for fun (because that's how you gain fluency) and talking about the books she read (to make sure that she was comprehending, not just decoding). She has lots of time to read the middle-grade classics, but only a certain amount of time to read the many wonderful works of young children's literature. |
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Phantom Tollbooth?
Check a Catholic school website summer reading list for rising 6th graders. |