Anonymous wrote:Keep practicing the letter sounds. Make sure these are VERY solid. You basically need to be able to point to any letter and she knows the sound in a second.Then, practice sounding out how they come together as a word. (A-T). Try to get her to say the letter sounds of a word to confirm she know it and hears it, then do the same again but this time without a breath between the letters. (AaaahhT) You can drag out the letters if needed and then work on shortening how long she drags it out. But you have to say them without taking a breath.
Be sure you are only saying the distinct letter sound and not adding additional sounds that aren’t really there. Also try reading some rhyming books.
Lastly, read the more advanced books to her. Kids can often listen and understand more advance books. Plus the additional vocabulary and hearing words is good for them. And it keeps them interested in reading.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Patience (easier said than done when she’s frustrated and comparing herself to friends, I know). It sounds like she’s got the interest and foundation, and 5.5 is still very young for putting all of the pieces together. It’s great that she’s interested in you reading more advanced content to her, that will serve her very well in the future.
She knows the individual sounds, but can she combine them into one sound in her head? So a+t says “at” not “ahh tttt”? If she has cat memorized, can she work on sounding out mat and hat? I would practice that level of phonics with individual words, not books, since she’s “too” good at memorizing. That’s IF she really wants to keep working on it over the summer. If not, take a break and just keep reading to her. Kindergarten and first grade are heavy phonics and I’d bet good money it will click for her and she’ll progress rapidly once it does.
Thanks! That is exactly where we are stuck. "Cat" is not translating to sounding out Hat or Mat or Can etc (switching out the phonetic sound).
Because there is a mismatch between what she wants to read and these very basic phonics, the "reading" time feels very artificial and then sort of fraught / stressful. I am struggling with it too - sometimes she will look at a word like Red and just make up something like Blue where it's clear there is no connection to the letters/sounds at all.
Anonymous wrote:Patience (easier said than done when she’s frustrated and comparing herself to friends, I know). It sounds like she’s got the interest and foundation, and 5.5 is still very young for putting all of the pieces together. It’s great that she’s interested in you reading more advanced content to her, that will serve her very well in the future.
She knows the individual sounds, but can she combine them into one sound in her head? So a+t says “at” not “ahh tttt”? If she has cat memorized, can she work on sounding out mat and hat? I would practice that level of phonics with individual words, not books, since she’s “too” good at memorizing. That’s IF she really wants to keep working on it over the summer. If not, take a break and just keep reading to her. Kindergarten and first grade are heavy phonics and I’d bet good money it will click for her and she’ll progress rapidly once it does.