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Teach Children How To Read

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The best way to teach kids to read is by making it fun and engaging them through songs, rhymes and print-rich environments. Proper teaching of phonics and phonemic awareness is also important.

The five essential components of reading are phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension.

Word games like identifying beginning/ending sounds in words and rhyming words help children focus on sounds and letters.

It says learning to read is a complex process that doesn’t happen on its own.

The best way to teach kid to read is by making it fun.

Most people don't think about the process of learning to read until they decide
to start teaching their own children at home.

Contrary to what some people believe, learning to read is not a 'natural'


process that happens all on its own. It's a complex one that requires the
proper teaching of various skills and strategies, such as phonics (knowing the
relationship between letters and sounds) and phonemic awareness.

The good news is that although reading itself is a complex process, the steps
taken in order to build these skills are fairly simple and straightforward. In
order to teach kids how to read and make it a positive and rewarding
experience, let us try these simple and time-tested strategies.

And now this morning, I will present to you the simple step to teach our child
at home and at the same time in the school.

THE SIMPLE STEPS TO TEACH A CHILD AT HOME

1. Use songs and nursery rhymes to build phonemic awareness


Children's songs and nursery rhymes aren't just a lot of fun—the rhyme and
rhythm help kids to hear the sounds and syllables in words, which helps them
learn to read. A good way to build phonemic awareness (one of the most
important skills in learning to read) is to clap rhythmically together and recite
songs in unison. This playful and bonding activity is a fantastic way for kids to
implicitly develop the literacy skills that will set them up for reading success.
There are activities to building in practicing phonemic awareness skills.

Example:

1. Games to play while Line-Up


2. Discriminate Rhymes
3. Discriminates between environmental sounds and speech sounds
4. Identify sounds and their sources
5. Develop daily language literacy, motor and social
*phonemic awareness- is the ability to hear and manipulate parts of
spoken language
* skill- listening/ auditory and spoken verbal no print

The following is a list of specific phonemic awareness skills. Keep in


mind, all of these are done at the auditory/spoken no print
Recognize word in a set beginning sounds, same sound, final sound
and initial sound.

2. Make simple word cards at home – helping them learn how to


sound out words.
Cut out simple cards and write a word containing three sounds on each one
(e.g. ram, sat, pig, top, sun, pot, fin). Invite your child to choose a card, then
read the word together and hold up three fingers. Ask them to say the first
sound they hear in the word, then the second, and then the third. This simple
activity requires little prep-time and builds essential phonics and decoding
skills (helping them learn how to sound out words). If your child is just starting
out with learning the letters of the alphabet, focus on the sound each letter
makes, more so than letter names.

3. Engage your child in a print-rich environment


- A print rich environment can be simply defining as a classroom whereby young children are given many
different opportunities with many different forms of print.

Create daily opportunities to build your child's reading skills by creating a


print-rich environment at home. Seeing printed words (on posters, charts,
books, labels etc.) enables children to see and apply connections between
sounds and letter symbols. When you're out and about, point out letters on
posters, billboards and signs. In time you can model sounding out the letters
to make words. Focus on the first letter in words. Ask your child “What sound
is that letter?” “What other word starts with that sound?” “What word rhymes
with that word?

Home- hang posters/ calendars- label the objects and areas in the room, label
furniture’s and doors
4. Play word games at home or in the car – word games are great
because they help children focus on sounds and letters and they
develop skills they need for reading and listening
Building on from the previous step, introduce simple word games on a regular
basis. Focus on playing games that encourage your child to listen, identify and
manipulate the sounds in words. For example, start by asking questions like
“What sound does the word                      start with?” “What sound does the
word                      end with?” “What words start with the sound                     ?”
and “What word rhymes with                     ?”.

5. Understand the core skills involved in teaching kids to read


It's important to remember that learning to read involves various different
skills. There are five essential components of reading that you can read
about here. These are the skills all children need in order to successfully learn
how to read. In summary, these include:
1. Phonemic awareness – the ability to hear and manipulate the different sounds
in words
EXAMPLE:
a. Recognizing which words in a set of words begin with the same sound
b. Isolating and the first or last sound in a word
c. Combining or blending the separate sound in a word
2. Phonics – recognizing the connection between letters and the sounds they
make

EXAMPLE: K- can be spelled c, k, ck and ch

3. Vocabulary – understanding the meaning of words, their definitions, and their


context
5 ways to teach vocabulary
1. Draw a picture
2. Make a dictionary
3. Make a sentence
4. Mime it – using only gestures without words
5. Pick a synonym or antonym

4. Reading comprehension – understand the meaning of text, both in storybooks


and information books. The purpose is to get the meaning from written text.

5. Fluency – the ability to read aloud with speed, understanding and accuracy
6. Play with letter magnets – playing with letters one of the best way to
prepare children for more target early literacy activities. Use magnetic
letters to play
Middle vowel sounds can be tricky for some children, which is why this activity
can be so helpful. Prepare letter magnets on the fridge and pull the vowels to
one side (a, e, i, o, u). Say a CVC word (consonant-vowel-consonant), for
example 'cat', and ask your child to spell it using the magnets. To help them,
say each vowel sound aloud (/ayh/, /eh/, /ih/, /awe/, /uh/) while pointing at its
letter, and ask your child which one makes a sound similar to the middle
sound.

7. Harness the power of technology to keep your child engaged


Learning to read should be an enjoyable process in order to keep kids
motivated to improve. Sometimes a child might be full of excitement and
eagerness to learn at the beginning, but once they hit a wall can feel
overwhelmed and give up easily. As a parent, it can feel impossible to pick up
again and know where to fill in any gaps that may be causing frustration.

Uses self-paced lessons that match each individual child's ability. Children are
regularly rewarded for completing activities and reaching new levels, which
keeps them motivated to stay on track. Parents can also view instant progress
reports to see how a child's skills are improving.

In using Ed-Technology, we can also consider our learners the task that will
may give will be suited for them so that they can watch attentively.

8. Read together on a daily basis and ask questions about the book
It helps them develop language in listening skills and prepares them to understand the written word.

A lot of people don't realize just how many skills can be picked up through the
simple act of reading to a child. Not only are you showing them how to sound
out words, you're also building key comprehension skills, growing their
vocabulary, and letting them hear what a fluent reader sounds like. Most of all,
regular reading helps your child to develop a love reading, which is the best
way to set them up for reading success.
Strengthen your child's comprehension skills by asking questions while
reading. For younger children, encourage them to engage with the pictures
(e.g. “Do you see the boat? What color is the cat?”). For older children, ask
questions about what you've just read, like “Why do you think the little bird
was afraid?” “When did Sophie realize she had special powers?”

9. Play games to memorize high-frequency sight words every day


Sight words are ones that cannot be easily sounded out and need to be
recognized on sight. They are commonly used words that young children
encouraged to memorize as a whole by sight.

High-frequency sight words are ones that occur very often in reading and
writing (e.g. you, I, we, am, had, and, to, the, have, they, where, was, does).
They are the on that appear most frequently in written text.

The strategy for learning sight words is, "See the word, say the word".
Learning to identify and read sight words is essential for young children to
become fluent readers. Most children will be able to learn a few sight words at
the age of four (e.g. is, it, my, me, no, see, and we) and around 20 sight words
by the end of their first year of school. You can teach sight words by playing
with flashcards.

10. Be patient; the best way to teach kids to read is to make it fun!
Every child learns at his or her own pace, so always remember the single most
important thing you can do is to make it enjoyable. By reading regularly, mixing
things up with the activities you choose, and letting your child pick out their
own books occasionally, you'll instill an early love of reading and give them
the best chance at reading success in no time.

“Teachers teach because they care. Teaching young people is what they do
best, it requires long hours, patience and care” – Horace Mann

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