Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Anonymous wrote:This work book sounds ridiculous. Your child can read just fine. You are looking for a problem where there isn’t one. My kid has been in Spanish immersion since kindergarten. She would have no idea what it meant to “circle the consonant blends” and she is an excellent reader in both Spanish and English. Why are you trying to force a kid that has no issues in school to do a bunch of extra work???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Op here. Yes and the workbook asks stuff like ‘mark the vowel you hear in each word to show whether it has the long or short sound’
‘circle the consonant blends’
‘ on the blank before each word write the sound of the underlined letters
Examples: hauled , spoiled
And ‘ when a root word has a short vowel sound followed by only one consonant, double the final consonant before adding “ed” or “ing”
You need to learn phonics so you can teach him properly.
And the difference between "raising" and "rising".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son has good grades in English and reads well.
So let him read! Take him to the library and check out lots of books. Encourage reading for fun. Have him read aloud to you sometimes.
We already do this and he reads well. It wasn’t until I bought this workbook that I started thinking about this stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son has good grades in English and reads well.
So let him read! Take him to the library and check out lots of books. Encourage reading for fun. Have him read aloud to you sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Our son has good grades in English and reads well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Op here. Yes and the workbook asks stuff like ‘mark the vowel you hear in each word to show whether it has the long or short sound’
‘circle the consonant blends’
‘ on the blank before each word write the sound of the underlined letters
Examples: hauled , spoiled
And ‘ when a root word has a short vowel sound followed by only one consonant, double the final consonant before adding “ed” or “ing”
You need to learn phonics so you can teach him properly.
Op here. That’s not going to happen. It’s going to drive me crazy.
You're not too old to learn English phonics rules. Don't listen to anyone who says there are no rules. There are just lots of rules because the language comes from many other languages. English has a lot of loan words from French and Latin but the substrate language is Germanic. Learning the origin of words helps immensely. And the difference between a vowel and consonant is not a matter of memorizing as the other poster said. Your mouth opens differently for a vowel vs consonant. (English is not my native language either but I did study it much more formally than a typical language learner.) Helps to have a positive attitude.
Op here. I don’t have the time or patience to learn in. I’m expecting right now, work FT and in FT grad school. I can get an online tutor for him if it’s really important. I know I am not the right person to help him or either is DH. This workbook is something I picked up myself. The school hasn’t said anything about this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Op here. Yes and the workbook asks stuff like ‘mark the vowel you hear in each word to show whether it has the long or short sound’
‘circle the consonant blends’
‘ on the blank before each word write the sound of the underlined letters
Examples: hauled , spoiled
And ‘ when a root word has a short vowel sound followed by only one consonant, double the final consonant before adding “ed” or “ing”
You need to learn phonics so you can teach him properly.
Op here. That’s not going to happen. It’s going to drive me crazy.
You're not too old to learn English phonics rules. Don't listen to anyone who says there are no rules. There are just lots of rules because the language comes from many other languages. English has a lot of loan words from French and Latin but the substrate language is Germanic. Learning the origin of words helps immensely. And the difference between a vowel and consonant is not a matter of memorizing as the other poster said. Your mouth opens differently for a vowel vs consonant. (English is not my native language either but I did study it much more formally than a typical language learner.) Helps to have a positive attitude.
Anonymous wrote:There is a big push towards phonics. Honestly, after the third grade, it goes out the door.