Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 1st grader also reads well above grade level and loves reading Dogman books. They are below his reading level but these are the books that got him to voluntarily choose to read on his own, without any prompting from me and outside of designated reading time. He's always been a strong reader but I never saw him CHOOSE to reading as an activity to pass the time (rather than play) until we got these books. I am not about to discourage this by telling him he needs to be reading something else.
We read a wider variety of books together every night and I always choose books for him to read aloud that are a bit above his reading level so that he can continue improving.
Who assessed his reading level? Dogman is a DRA level 38. I doubt any teacher assessed him past that. They will usually only go to 28 max in 1st grade. Your own assessment doesn’t count.
Anonymous wrote:Don't make this a thing unless you want to incite him to rebel against your reading suggestions. Let his reading be a personal choice just like yours is.
Anonymous wrote:My 1st grader also reads well above grade level and loves reading Dogman books. They are below his reading level but these are the books that got him to voluntarily choose to read on his own, without any prompting from me and outside of designated reading time. He's always been a strong reader but I never saw him CHOOSE to reading as an activity to pass the time (rather than play) until we got these books. I am not about to discourage this by telling him he needs to be reading something else.
We read a wider variety of books together every night and I always choose books for him to read aloud that are a bit above his reading level so that he can continue improving.
Anonymous wrote:Dogman, Captain Underpants, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, and Jedi Academy were pretty much it for a while. He also wound up liking the Reina Telgemaier books (“Smile”) as a seven year old boy.
A lot of kids have troubles switching to books without accompanying images. For some reason, my son would read Roald Dahl.
Let him read what he enjoys.