Anonymous wrote:My son is in kindergarten. He entered kinder reading at a second grade level. I formally started teaching him to read when he turned four. I used to teach first grade and I wanted the joy in teaching him how to read. It is amazing to see the progress. I also wanted to make sure he was taught using phonics and not taught to rely on learning sight words. By 4 1/2 he could read easy readers like Are You My Mother? / Go, Dog, Go / Fly Guy etc. If you want to teach him and he wants to learn, go for it. It is a lot easier to teach reading one-to-one as compared to teaching a whole class. Hooked on Phonics will work, you can also get the Bob Books too.
Anonymous wrote:my DC is 4.5 years old and he will be starting Kindergarten in the fall of 2013. He knows a dozen 3-letter words, like hat, cat, etc. We haven't taught him reading specifically even though he knows the basics of phonics. When I asked his pre-K teacher, she said there is a wide range of reading levels amongst kids of his age, and he doesn't necessarily need to be able to read at any level in order to start Kindergarten. Just out of curiosity, what's your child reading level when he is/was at around 4 years old? Do I need to teach him how to read? If yes, what materials should I use (Hooked on Phonics)? Thanks a lot!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is in kindergarten. He entered kinder reading at a second grade level. I formally started teaching him to read when he turned four. I used to teach first grade and I wanted the joy in teaching him how to read. It is amazing to see the progress. I also wanted to make sure he was taught using phonics and not taught to rely on learning sight words. By 4 1/2 he could read easy readers like Are You My Mother? / Go, Dog, Go / Fly Guy etc. If you want to teach him and he wants to learn, go for it. It is a lot easier to teach reading one-to-one as compared to teaching a whole class. Hooked on Phonics will work, you can also get the Bob Books too.
I think it's good to balance sight words with phonics because there are some high-frequency words that it just helps to know so kids can build up their reading fluency.