Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always question these responses. My kids both read before kindergarten. Both were pulled out for extra services along with 1 other kid (w/my son) and 2 other kids my daughter. This was out of 30 kids. So VERY difficult to believe all these kids are reading. I'm guessing many are "reading." And the person who said he kid read H.Potter as a first grader...I just grabbed out copy and flipped through it. He understood: chortle, apothecary, swarthy, prefect, smarmy, hygienic...
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Not all early readers are created the same. 6yo's early reading was driven by early comprehension skills and vocabulary. The ability to sound out any word came only recently. Now this kid is truly unstoppable.
I also know a 6yo with an amazing vocabulary that is not really reading yet--he might have a better vocabulary than you are I, seriously. ANd I know plenty of kids who can read but have very little understanding of what they read.
Of course, but I know of no 6 year old who could read something that is well above the child's life experiences and be able to truly understand it. All 6 year olds are different, but within a range. No matter how brilliant, a 6 year old won't have the life experiences to understand many, many texts.
I'm not sure of your point. I remember reading some books in elementary school, and some/most of the mental and emotional stuff just went right over me. I still enjoyed reading the books, and learned something from them. Re-reading books now is a different experience than reading them in high school or college. We all gain life experience by living it.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, my DD taught herself to read before K but it would have been much better if she hadn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes- my daughter started reading a few months before we started kindergarten. They worked on that stuff in her preschool.
She's at the top of her class right now. The kids are all at various levels. Our school puts a very big emphasis on reading.
Parent like you give me heartburn. No one cares she is at the top of her grade.
Actually, I do care. I want to encourage early reading so that my DC can experience being at the top of his class and want to work to stay there. Academics are important to me and to DH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always question these responses. My kids both read before kindergarten. Both were pulled out for extra services along with 1 other kid (w/my son) and 2 other kids my daughter. This was out of 30 kids. So VERY difficult to believe all these kids are reading. I'm guessing many are "reading." And the person who said he kid read H.Potter as a first grader...I just grabbed out copy and flipped through it. He understood: chortle, apothecary, swarthy, prefect, smarmy, hygienic...
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Not all early readers are created the same. 6yo's early reading was driven by early comprehension skills and vocabulary. The ability to sound out any word came only recently. Now this kid is truly unstoppable.
I also know a 6yo with an amazing vocabulary that is not really reading yet--he might have a better vocabulary than you are I, seriously. ANd I know plenty of kids who can read but have very little understanding of what they read.
Of course, but I know of no 6 year old who could read something that is well above the child's life experiences and be able to truly understand it. All 6 year olds are different, but within a range. No matter how brilliant, a 6 year old won't have the life experiences to understand many, many texts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always question these responses. My kids both read before kindergarten. Both were pulled out for extra services along with 1 other kid (w/my son) and 2 other kids my daughter. This was out of 30 kids. So VERY difficult to believe all these kids are reading. I'm guessing many are "reading." And the person who said he kid read H.Potter as a first grader...I just grabbed out copy and flipped through it. He understood: chortle, apothecary, swarthy, prefect, smarmy, hygienic...
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Not all early readers are created the same. 6yo's early reading was driven by early comprehension skills and vocabulary. The ability to sound out any word came only recently. Now this kid is truly unstoppable.
I also know a 6yo with an amazing vocabulary that is not really reading yet--he might have a better vocabulary than you are I, seriously. ANd I know plenty of kids who can read but have very little understanding of what they read.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always question these responses. My kids both read before kindergarten. Both were pulled out for extra services along with 1 other kid (w/my son) and 2 other kids my daughter. This was out of 30 kids. So VERY difficult to believe all these kids are reading. I'm guessing many are "reading." And the person who said he kid read H.Potter as a first grader...I just grabbed out copy and flipped through it. He understood: chortle, apothecary, swarthy, prefect, smarmy, hygienic...
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Not all early readers are created the same. 6yo's early reading was driven by early comprehension skills and vocabulary. The ability to sound out any word came only recently. Now this kid is truly unstoppable.
I also know a 6yo with an amazing vocabulary that is not really reading yet--he might have a better vocabulary than you are I, seriously. ANd I know plenty of kids who can read but have very little understanding of what they read.
Anonymous wrote:I always question these responses. My kids both read before kindergarten. Both were pulled out for extra services along with 1 other kid (w/my son) and 2 other kids my daughter. This was out of 30 kids. So VERY difficult to believe all these kids are reading. I'm guessing many are "reading." And the person who said he kid read H.Potter as a first grader...I just grabbed out copy and flipped through it. He understood: chortle, apothecary, swarthy, prefect, smarmy, hygienic...
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always question these responses. My kids both read before kindergarten. Both were pulled out for extra services along with 1 other kid (w/my son) and 2 other kids my daughter. This was out of 30 kids. So VERY difficult to believe all these kids are reading. I'm guessing many are "reading." And the person who said he kid read H.Potter as a first grader...I just grabbed out copy and flipped through it. He understood: chortle, apothecary, swarthy, prefect, smarmy, hygienic...
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You find it difficult to believe all these kids could be reading while in the same sentence declaring BOTH of yours read before K? It's not that hard to believe, especially if you had two of these supposed reading unicorns in your family.
Anonymous wrote:20:57 - clearly you do care, or my simple factual statement wouldn't have pissed you off so much. (I'm 20:46.)
I actually worried about my daughter for a long time because I was a very early reader (by age 3, according to my folks) and assumed she would be as well. When she wasn't reading until right before K, I got concerned that she was "behind." I had friends whose kids were reading at age 4. I was relieved when she started K and the teacher told me she was actually ahead of the game and not way behind.
Anonymous wrote:I always question these responses. My kids both read before kindergarten. Both were pulled out for extra services along with 1 other kid (w/my son) and 2 other kids my daughter. This was out of 30 kids. So VERY difficult to believe all these kids are reading. I'm guessing many are "reading." And the person who said he kid read H.Potter as a first grader...I just grabbed out copy and flipped through it. He understood: chortle, apothecary, swarthy, prefect, smarmy, hygienic...
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