Kids should only be truly bored if they already know phonics and its not new content. If it's new material, then there is stuff for their brains to learn. For that reason I'd never recommend it for a 1st or 2nd grader. The start of K really is the latest or many of the early lessons will be too repetitive of stuff they already know.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a good stage to do How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. It's a great foundation.
OP here and we actually bought this book a few months ago, but it was a bust for us. We still offer it sometimes, but it's too dry for her. It feels like a chore for both of us.
What has worked better for us is a Highlights phonics workbook (it's one of the ones with the dry erase pages so she can do it however many times she wants) and the Hooked on Phonics app. We are not big on screen time but she'll do like a 5 minute game on there and it has really helped her with sounding out words and also figuring out long and short vowels, as well as blends. The key to both is that they are fun for her, especially in small doses, and there's this immediate payoff. Yesterday she did like 4 pages from the workbook and even chose not to do the writing practice (we don't push) but also sounded out like 5 new words I had no idea she could sound out (including "oo" words and some with the silent "e" at the end which had previously been really frustrating for her). It was exciting and made me realize she is really just about to cross a big threshold with reading.
Just putting this here for anyone else who has tried the 100 Easy Lessons and found it unhelpful. There are other ways to support reading skills that might work better for your kid. I'd seen that suggested a million times here and elsewhere and felt mildly defeated when we got it and my kid didn't like it at all.
How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons was dry and felt like a chore for us too but if you just consistently stick with it, it absolutely works. I had to balance it with listening to fun audiobooks after each lesson, which is something I still have to do with my fifth grader after we grind through his homework.![]()
Yep. Really dry, but kids learn to read really well.
Only if they don't mind how dry it is. If you try to do 100 Easy Lessons with a kid who is bored to tears while doing it, you really do risk making them view reading as dull and rote, and would be better off using phonics games and workbooks.
Kids are different. Some kids will sit through a dull reading lesson every day for 10 minutes and won't mind. Some kids will complain and get distracted and look for any way or reason to get out of it. If you have the latter kind of kid, it doesn't mean you need to force them to change, and it doesn't mean they won't learn to read. It just means you need a different approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kindergartener is right in the thick of learning to read -- she knows all the letters and their sounds and can sound out words with support, and is starting to gain real phonetic understanding. But she still can't sit down and just read a book on her own. But it does feel like this is probably coming in the next 6 months or so, especially with the support she'll now get at school (my understanding is that they do a lot more reading practice in kindergartener whereas there wasn't really much in PK)/
We have been reading a combination of picture books, early readers, and chapter books to her through this process. Do people have specific book recommendations for this age/reading level that were a hit with your kids? We'd especially love books that you read to your kids and then became the first books they read on their own (do those exist?). She loves books and loves being read to and we want to keep that interest alive through this process. She's a bit of a perfectionist and I think one reason she doesn't attempt to sound out words unless prompted is that it is so much harder than just having us read to her. We aren't going to stop that, but we'd love books that might inspire her to try it out on her own and will accommodate her level and help her to feel successful quickly. I'm guessing that means early readers but I've struggled to find good ones she finds engaging.
This is a good stage to do How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. It's a great foundation.
Not being snarky -- is there a potential that doing this will conflict with/confuse what they are teaching in kinder? My DD is at the same point and she is eager so I want to feed the interest but now that she is finally in "real school," I am worried about confusing the issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kindergartener is right in the thick of learning to read -- she knows all the letters and their sounds and can sound out words with support, and is starting to gain real phonetic understanding. But she still can't sit down and just read a book on her own. But it does feel like this is probably coming in the next 6 months or so, especially with the support she'll now get at school (my understanding is that they do a lot more reading practice in kindergartener whereas there wasn't really much in PK)/
We have been reading a combination of picture books, early readers, and chapter books to her through this process. Do people have specific book recommendations for this age/reading level that were a hit with your kids? We'd especially love books that you read to your kids and then became the first books they read on their own (do those exist?). She loves books and loves being read to and we want to keep that interest alive through this process. She's a bit of a perfectionist and I think one reason she doesn't attempt to sound out words unless prompted is that it is so much harder than just having us read to her. We aren't going to stop that, but we'd love books that might inspire her to try it out on her own and will accommodate her level and help her to feel successful quickly. I'm guessing that means early readers but I've struggled to find good ones she finds engaging.
This is a good stage to do How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. It's a great foundation.
Not being snarky -- is there a potential that doing this will conflict with/confuse what they are teaching in kinder? My DD is at the same point and she is eager so I want to feed the interest but now that she is finally in "real school," I am worried about confusing the issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kindergartener is right in the thick of learning to read -- she knows all the letters and their sounds and can sound out words with support, and is starting to gain real phonetic understanding. But she still can't sit down and just read a book on her own. But it does feel like this is probably coming in the next 6 months or so, especially with the support she'll now get at school (my understanding is that they do a lot more reading practice in kindergartener whereas there wasn't really much in PK)/
We have been reading a combination of picture books, early readers, and chapter books to her through this process. Do people have specific book recommendations for this age/reading level that were a hit with your kids? We'd especially love books that you read to your kids and then became the first books they read on their own (do those exist?). She loves books and loves being read to and we want to keep that interest alive through this process. She's a bit of a perfectionist and I think one reason she doesn't attempt to sound out words unless prompted is that it is so much harder than just having us read to her. We aren't going to stop that, but we'd love books that might inspire her to try it out on her own and will accommodate her level and help her to feel successful quickly. I'm guessing that means early readers but I've struggled to find good ones she finds engaging.
This is a good stage to do How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. It's a great foundation.
Not being snarky -- is there a potential that doing this will conflict with/confuse what they are teaching in kinder? My DD is at the same point and she is eager so I want to feed the interest but now that she is finally in "real school," I am worried about confusing the issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a good stage to do How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. It's a great foundation.
OP here and we actually bought this book a few months ago, but it was a bust for us. We still offer it sometimes, but it's too dry for her. It feels like a chore for both of us.
What has worked better for us is a Highlights phonics workbook (it's one of the ones with the dry erase pages so she can do it however many times she wants) and the Hooked on Phonics app. We are not big on screen time but she'll do like a 5 minute game on there and it has really helped her with sounding out words and also figuring out long and short vowels, as well as blends. The key to both is that they are fun for her, especially in small doses, and there's this immediate payoff. Yesterday she did like 4 pages from the workbook and even chose not to do the writing practice (we don't push) but also sounded out like 5 new words I had no idea she could sound out (including "oo" words and some with the silent "e" at the end which had previously been really frustrating for her). It was exciting and made me realize she is really just about to cross a big threshold with reading.
Just putting this here for anyone else who has tried the 100 Easy Lessons and found it unhelpful. There are other ways to support reading skills that might work better for your kid. I'd seen that suggested a million times here and elsewhere and felt mildly defeated when we got it and my kid didn't like it at all.
How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons was dry and felt like a chore for us too but if you just consistently stick with it, it absolutely works. I had to balance it with listening to fun audiobooks after each lesson, which is something I still have to do with my fifth grader after we grind through his homework.![]()
Yep. Really dry, but kids learn to read really well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kindergartener is right in the thick of learning to read -- she knows all the letters and their sounds and can sound out words with support, and is starting to gain real phonetic understanding. But she still can't sit down and just read a book on her own. But it does feel like this is probably coming in the next 6 months or so, especially with the support she'll now get at school (my understanding is that they do a lot more reading practice in kindergartener whereas there wasn't really much in PK)/
We have been reading a combination of picture books, early readers, and chapter books to her through this process. Do people have specific book recommendations for this age/reading level that were a hit with your kids? We'd especially love books that you read to your kids and then became the first books they read on their own (do those exist?). She loves books and loves being read to and we want to keep that interest alive through this process. She's a bit of a perfectionist and I think one reason she doesn't attempt to sound out words unless prompted is that it is so much harder than just having us read to her. We aren't going to stop that, but we'd love books that might inspire her to try it out on her own and will accommodate her level and help her to feel successful quickly. I'm guessing that means early readers but I've struggled to find good ones she finds engaging.
This is a good stage to do How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. It's a great foundation.
You're looking for Elephant and Piggie.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d decouple your reading to her and her reading to herself. She’ll read, and it doesn’t really matter if it is next month or at the start of first grade. What she could lose is the love of words and reading because learning to read is a slog for some kids (my son and I are both dyslexic, so I know of what I speak). Read out loud to her (or let her listen to audiobooks) all the wonderful things that are at her cognitive level but beyond her reading level. Open doors for her she can’t open on her own. Plan to keep doing that for as long as she’ll let you - I read out loud to my son until he was 11 or so, just like my dad did for me.
When my son was in K I read him the first three Harry Potters, then took a break till he was in 2nd for the next few. After Potter we went through all the Percy Jackson books. He wasn’t a fan of the old classics I had loved so I didn’t push it - the point was to have him love the experience of reading.
OP here. Thanks for the Harry Potter rec -- I was wondering when might be a good time to start those. I think she might find them a bit to scary still, but good to know some K kids do well with them and I could read them when she seems ready for the content.
I'm not terribly worried about her losing a love of books or words -- she's obsessed with reading and loves books. But I actually think right now our reading to her and her reading practice are too decoupled -- she has her books that she memorizes and reads (mostly her Bob books) and then she has the books we read to her (a broad variety) that she doesn't engage with as much outside of our read-together times. We'd like some books that we could read to her but also that she might spend more time with when we aren't reading, to help her start to put that together a bit. Not with pressure, but just to passively make that connection in her own mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a good stage to do How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. It's a great foundation.
OP here and we actually bought this book a few months ago, but it was a bust for us. We still offer it sometimes, but it's too dry for her. It feels like a chore for both of us.
What has worked better for us is a Highlights phonics workbook (it's one of the ones with the dry erase pages so she can do it however many times she wants) and the Hooked on Phonics app. We are not big on screen time but she'll do like a 5 minute game on there and it has really helped her with sounding out words and also figuring out long and short vowels, as well as blends. The key to both is that they are fun for her, especially in small doses, and there's this immediate payoff. Yesterday she did like 4 pages from the workbook and even chose not to do the writing practice (we don't push) but also sounded out like 5 new words I had no idea she could sound out (including "oo" words and some with the silent "e" at the end which had previously been really frustrating for her). It was exciting and made me realize she is really just about to cross a big threshold with reading.
Just putting this here for anyone else who has tried the 100 Easy Lessons and found it unhelpful. There are other ways to support reading skills that might work better for your kid. I'd seen that suggested a million times here and elsewhere and felt mildly defeated when we got it and my kid didn't like it at all.
How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons was dry and felt like a chore for us too but if you just consistently stick with it, it absolutely works. I had to balance it with listening to fun audiobooks after each lesson, which is something I still have to do with my fifth grader after we grind through his homework.![]()
Anonymous wrote:I’d decouple your reading to her and her reading to herself. She’ll read, and it doesn’t really matter if it is next month or at the start of first grade. What she could lose is the love of words and reading because learning to read is a slog for some kids (my son and I are both dyslexic, so I know of what I speak). Read out loud to her (or let her listen to audiobooks) all the wonderful things that are at her cognitive level but beyond her reading level. Open doors for her she can’t open on her own. Plan to keep doing that for as long as she’ll let you - I read out loud to my son until he was 11 or so, just like my dad did for me.
When my son was in K I read him the first three Harry Potters, then took a break till he was in 2nd for the next few. After Potter we went through all the Percy Jackson books. He wasn’t a fan of the old classics I had loved so I didn’t push it - the point was to have him love the experience of reading.
Anonymous wrote:
This is a good stage to do How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. It's a great foundation.
OP here and we actually bought this book a few months ago, but it was a bust for us. We still offer it sometimes, but it's too dry for her. It feels like a chore for both of us.
What has worked better for us is a Highlights phonics workbook (it's one of the ones with the dry erase pages so she can do it however many times she wants) and the Hooked on Phonics app. We are not big on screen time but she'll do like a 5 minute game on there and it has really helped her with sounding out words and also figuring out long and short vowels, as well as blends. The key to both is that they are fun for her, especially in small doses, and there's this immediate payoff. Yesterday she did like 4 pages from the workbook and even chose not to do the writing practice (we don't push) but also sounded out like 5 new words I had no idea she could sound out (including "oo" words and some with the silent "e" at the end which had previously been really frustrating for her). It was exciting and made me realize she is really just about to cross a big threshold with reading.
Just putting this here for anyone else who has tried the 100 Easy Lessons and found it unhelpful. There are other ways to support reading skills that might work better for your kid. I'd seen that suggested a million times here and elsewhere and felt mildly defeated when we got it and my kid didn't like it at all.
Anonymous wrote:I’d decouple your reading to her and her reading to herself. She’ll read, and it doesn’t really matter if it is next month or at the start of first grade. What she could lose is the love of words and reading because learning to read is a slog for some kids (my son and I are both dyslexic, so I know of what I speak). Read out loud to her (or let her listen to audiobooks) all the wonderful things that are at her cognitive level but beyond her reading level. Open doors for her she can’t open on her own. Plan to keep doing that for as long as she’ll let you - I read out loud to my son until he was 11 or so, just like my dad did for me.
When my son was in K I read him the first three Harry Potters, then took a break till he was in 2nd for the next few. After Potter we went through all the Percy Jackson books. He wasn’t a fan of the old classics I had loved so I didn’t push it - the point was to have him love the experience of reading.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Junie B Jones series. The main character is in kindergarten, which can be very easy to relate to. Even though they are chapter books, they are easy enough words to have the early reader attempt to recognize some familiar site words or sound them out. Also can try comic books, such as Dog Man, which is what got my now first grader motivated to read.
I banned those books. She's such a horrible brat, and my kid started being bratty and sassy like her. So I told DD we weren't reading those books anymore and found books with nicer characters. Later found out a tons of parents in DD's grade did the same thing.
Yep. Also banned in our house.