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Learning to Read in English and Spanish Made Easy: A Guide for Teachers, Tutors, and Parents
Learning to Read in English and Spanish Made Easy: A Guide for Teachers, Tutors, and Parents
Learning to Read in English and Spanish Made Easy: A Guide for Teachers, Tutors, and Parents
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Learning to Read in English and Spanish Made Easy: A Guide for Teachers, Tutors, and Parents

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Reading is fundamental to every child's growth. It expands their creative experiences and allows them to venture into the unknown. It also expands their vocabulary and develops concepts that are going to help children with communication skills and prepare them for academic success. Reading is the critical foundation for learning.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 15, 2022
ISBN9781641338479
Learning to Read in English and Spanish Made Easy: A Guide for Teachers, Tutors, and Parents
Author

Susie G. Navarijo

Susie G. Navarijo is a retired first grade teacher. She taught thirty years at Cable Elementary in the Northside District in San Antonio, Texas, where she was one of the first bilingual teachers in the district. In 1986 she was selected Bilingual Teacher of the Year for the San Antonio Area Association for Bilingual Education. Because she had to divide her groups into English and Spanish, as well as by ability, she developed methods that allowed her to stress commonalities in both languages. Mrs. Navarijo received her Bachelor's of Education degree in 1972 and her Masters of Education degree in 1979 from Our Lady of the Lake University in San Antonia, Texas. She is certified as an Elementary Bilingual/ESL teacher. After retirement, her love of children and success in teaching brought her to tutor migrant children. This book will allow Mrs. Navarijo to pass along her successful method, as well as her experiences, with other teachers, tutors, and parents in hope that her belief that every child can learn will become a reality in every classroom in America.

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    Learning to Read in English and Spanish Made Easy - Susie G. Navarijo

    Introduction

    There is no one way to teach reading to every child. So much depends on the child’s learning style, on the child’s experiences, and on the teacher’s teaching style. In my thirty-five years of teaching first grade and tutoring individuals and small groups in my class, I have learned to have a variety of tricks at hand in order to reinforce and re-teach some lessons. Sometimes, all one has to do is look into the eyes of some children to know that teacher and child are not connecting. The necessity of transmitting information from the teacher’s brain to the child’s brain requires a repertoire of ideas at hand in order to meet the needs of each individual. In this way, every child has a better chance of experiencing success. After all, that is the most important aspect of teaching: to reach each child’s individual potential, thus leaving no one behind.

    If a child in my class was having problems, I would sometimes invite the parent to school for the day or visit them at home, not to complain about the child, but to show them that their family was important to me. Bringing out the positive aspects of a child, as well as his weaknesses, is important. Parent and child respond positively and accept what the teacher has to say. I have made many good friends from the parents of my children. Many have been room mothers who were able to help their own children as well as others by using the strategies they observed in the classroom.

    Every principal for whom I worked has recognized that I had very high expectations for every child. They were right. I did expect every child to learn. I made many mistakes as a teacher, but believing in my children was not one of them. It was always my goal to take them from where they were and guide them towards their potential. I learned that not everyone’s potential is the same. But sometimes, we shortchange children by not expecting them to do more.

    Teachers have often told me I should write a book about the ideas I have developed throughout the years. New teachers come to school with little or no experience. They may find it necessary to tutor some of the children in their classroom. So this is my way of sharing my experience with new teachers as well as other tutors, parent helpers, and individuals.

    These ideas will be useful to mothers helping their children at home. Many mothers have come to me to ask me how they can help their child. I always tell them that first of all, reading to them is the most important thing they can do. Reading, talking, and playing helps children to become better listeners. It also helps them to practice language patterns, grammar, and vocabulary. Experiencing their world through play enables children to concretely see what they will later learn abstractly. Pictures in the mind are formed from experiencing the world first hand. This gives children the foundation for reading.

    Reading in a Bilingual Classroom

    My ideas for teaching English reading are unique and effective. Spanish reading is less complex than English so I will give an overview of reading in Spanish after I introduce some points in writing, spelling, and grammar in English. But throughout the book, I will relate English to Spanish reading and some problems one might encounter along the way. As a bilingual teacher, I found it necessary to teach reading in English to some children who also knew how to speak Spanish and reading in Spanish to a group of children who knew little or no English. This was in addition to teaching English to monolingual students. Dividing my time was challenging at best, but my students seemed to progress rather smoothly in both languages.

    Teaching two languages allowed me to compare the strategies used in both languages and to alter the methods suggested in most reading texts to better serve my students. This led me to seek commonalities and to reinforce learning by repeating the same concepts in English and in Spanish whenever possible. For example, instead of teaching the short vowel sound, I found it effective to teach all the sounds for each vowel simultaneously. The Spanish children were making syllables—ma me mi mo mu—to make words, so I had a chart for them. The English children were making syllables (or small words) with a ai au - man mail mauI, so I had a chart for them. When it was time to transition from Spanish to English, I could then point out that the three sounds of a had the short vowel sound as in apple, the long vowel sound as in its name, and that the third sound was much like the ah in Spanish. By memorizing the three sounds and referring to the chart for the particular spelling of a, in an unknown word children could figure out a word they did not know, instead of asking the teacher all the time. It made them more independent readers.

    Many of the ideas presented in this book are a conglomeration of lessons that have been developed from scratch or have been derived from bits and pieces of different lessons from my thirty years experience as a first grade teacher. Some methods generally used in Spanish, I

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