Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
NP here. My second grader reads for enjoyment and we have to police her room at night or she will stay up until midnight reading. She will refuse a book if she has trouble understanding the content. I can't imagine there are many kids who will force themselves to read something they don't understand. That sounds like torture.
I'm the poster who suggested The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, but I wanted to chime in here and defend PP above. I've been flamed many times on these boards for describing what my son read in these early grades. I was told my son couldn't possibly understand what he was reading, etc. Unfortunately, many of his teachers thought the same, and it's only now in middle school that he's blossomed in a gifted program, and is actually happy and understood by his teachers. It's sad that in this country so many elementary school teachers lack the necessary intelligence and training in their field.
So I believe you, PP. I knew which stair to avoid so it wouldn't creak while I got my book from downstairs (because my mother didn't trust me), and read it under the covers at night with a flashlightMy son used to tune out his teachers in elementary school and read his books under his desk. Now he doesn't have to do that, since he is encouraged to read anything he likes and write about all of them.
Anonymous wrote:
NP here. My second grader reads for enjoyment and we have to police her room at night or she will stay up until midnight reading. She will refuse a book if she has trouble understanding the content. I can't imagine there are many kids who will force themselves to read something they don't understand. That sounds like torture.
My son used to tune out his teachers in elementary school and read his books under his desk. Now he doesn't have to do that, since he is encouraged to read anything he likes and write about all of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you buying for your own child or a relative/friend? If you know a reading level, that will help tremendously. There is such a wide variation -- one kid reads Harry Potter, another Ivy & Bean, and another is still decoding words. All within the expected range for 2nd grade.
OP please realize the kids reading the Harry Potter chapter books may be reading most of the words, but they do not truly understand it and the depth of the books, especially book 3 onwards. I think some parents enjoy pushing books that kids can read but not comprehend for some odd reason.
There are so many chapter series out there but I think going back to old-school books are nice gifts. Donald Rahl, Judy Blume, Nancy Drew etc... Even if they are too hard, most parents still read chapter books to kids this age.
Umm, we're talking about second graders, not kindergartners. Some children may be decoding the Harry Potter books without any comprehension, but others are actually reading them.
I wouldn't suggest Harry Potter as a gift, though, unless you're considering those new illustrated versions.
NP here...yes, we know. A second grader may get the fist from knowing the general story, but will miss a tremendous amount of the intended I formation. I know, I know...not your kid.![]()
NP here. My second grader reads for enjoyment and we have to police her room at night or she will stay up until midnight reading. She will refuse a book if she has trouble understanding the content. I can't imagine there are many kids who will force themselves to read something they don't understand. That sounds like torture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you buying for your own child or a relative/friend? If you know a reading level, that will help tremendously. There is such a wide variation -- one kid reads Harry Potter, another Ivy & Bean, and another is still decoding words. All within the expected range for 2nd grade.
OP please realize the kids reading the Harry Potter chapter books may be reading most of the words, but they do not truly understand it and the depth of the books, especially book 3 onwards. I think some parents enjoy pushing books that kids can read but not comprehend for some odd reason.
There are so many chapter series out there but I think going back to old-school books are nice gifts. Donald Rahl, Judy Blume, Nancy Drew etc... Even if they are too hard, most parents still read chapter books to kids this age.
Umm, we're talking about second graders, not kindergartners. Some children may be decoding the Harry Potter books without any comprehension, but others are actually reading them.
I wouldn't suggest Harry Potter as a gift, though, unless you're considering those new illustrated versions.
NP here...yes, we know. A second grader may get the fist from knowing the general story, but will miss a tremendous amount of the intended I formation. I know, I know...not your kid.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you buying for your own child or a relative/friend? If you know a reading level, that will help tremendously. There is such a wide variation -- one kid reads Harry Potter, another Ivy & Bean, and another is still decoding words. All within the expected range for 2nd grade.
OP please realize the kids reading the Harry Potter chapter books may be reading most of the words, but they do not truly understand it and the depth of the books, especially book 3 onwards. I think some parents enjoy pushing books that kids can read but not comprehend for some odd reason.
There are so many chapter series out there but I think going back to old-school books are nice gifts. Donald Rahl, Judy Blume, Nancy Drew etc... Even if they are too hard, most parents still read chapter books to kids this age.
Umm, we're talking about second graders, not kindergartners. Some children may be decoding the Harry Potter books without any comprehension, but others are actually reading them.
I wouldn't suggest Harry Potter as a gift, though, unless you're considering those new illustrated versions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you buying for your own child or a relative/friend? If you know a reading level, that will help tremendously. There is such a wide variation -- one kid reads Harry Potter, another Ivy & Bean, and another is still decoding words. All within the expected range for 2nd grade.
OP please realize the kids reading the Harry Potter chapter books may be reading most of the words, but they do not truly understand it and the depth of the books, especially book 3 onwards. I think some parents enjoy pushing books that kids can read but not comprehend for some odd reason.
There are so many chapter series out there but I think going back to old-school books are nice gifts. Donald Rahl, Judy Blume, Nancy Drew etc... Even if they are too hard, most parents still read chapter books to kids this age.
Anonymous wrote:Are you buying for your own child or a relative/friend? If you know a reading level, that will help tremendously. There is such a wide variation -- one kid reads Harry Potter, another Ivy & Bean, and another is still decoding words. All within the expected range for 2nd grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like PP said there is a HUGE variety at this age. My own child is mainly reading non fiction now in second grade. He raced through the Harry Potter series at the end of kindergarten, which isn't representative. Most second graders aren't yet reading for meaning yet. Basic chapter books are common.
You should have him retread them in a few years when he will understand much more...
Reread
He already has. But, yes, probably will again! He's also reread the Narnia books lately and the Little House books.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like PP said there is a HUGE variety at this age. My own child is mainly reading non fiction now in second grade. He raced through the Harry Potter series at the end of kindergarten, which isn't representative. Most second graders aren't yet reading for meaning yet. Basic chapter books are common.
You should have him retread them in a few years when he will understand much more...
Reread
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like PP said there is a HUGE variety at this age. My own child is mainly reading non fiction now in second grade. He raced through the Harry Potter series at the end of kindergarten, which isn't representative. Most second graders aren't yet reading for meaning yet. Basic chapter books are common.
You should have him retread them in a few years when he will understand much more...
Anonymous wrote:Like PP said there is a HUGE variety at this age. My own child is mainly reading non fiction now in second grade. He raced through the Harry Potter series at the end of kindergarten, which isn't representative. Most second graders aren't yet reading for meaning yet. Basic chapter books are common.