Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for all the great tips and suggestions. We do read to dd everyday. We prob read about three bookstore her. I wish we read to her more but we both work full time and there seems to be such limited hours in the day!
I will probably purchase the book recommended. It does seem like she may be a little behind her peers, in that she still has trouble recognizing letters and really doesn't know their sounds.
Thanks again.
IIRC, the 100 Lessons book starts right off with sounding out words and recognizing what letters do in various contexts. It will not teach her letters and their sounds.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for all the great tips and suggestions. We do read to dd everyday. We prob read about three bookstore her. I wish we read to her more but we both work full time and there seems to be such limited hours in the day!
I will probably purchase the book recommended. It does seem like she may be a little behind her peers, in that she still has trouble recognizing letters and really doesn't know their sounds.
Thanks again.
Anonymous wrote:The posts about learning to read got me thinking. My child is going to start k this fall and so I haven't even been thinking of reading or anything like that but I would like to find out more to help her this year. Is it something your kids learned in k or something your practiced at Home? Dd still has trouble identifying many letters and almost no numbers. Are there books that helped show dc how tO put letters together to make a word? Or should I just back off and let her learn this stuff at school?
Anonymous wrote:We sat down and read to them every day, pretty much from birth. We never really "taught" them anything. They just figured it out after a while and gradually started to read on their own. I guess you could call it reading in a couple thousand easy lessons.
I'd say, just read with them.
Anonymous wrote:Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. Awesome book, easy to do with your kid. We started the summer before kindergarten and didn't do it every day, so finished around Christmas. It really did help my son, I don't think he would have been at the same level at the end of the year or going into first grade if we hadn't gone through the book at home.
If she isn't even recognizing all her letters yet, I would definitely do something additional at home; the teacher won't have a lot of time to work with her individually.
http://www.amazon.com/Teach-Your-Child-Read-Lessons/dp/0671631985/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1345662479&sr=8-1&keywords=teach+your+child+to+read+in+100+easy+lessons