parent tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

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Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateach er.com

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Page 1: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

Parent Tips to help children to

read.

©reflectionsofateacher.com

Page 2: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

READING IS THINKINGLearning how to read is a developmental process just as learning how to walk and talk. As parents and teachers, we need to provide encouragement with our words and actions to help children along his/her journey of learning how to read.

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Page 3: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

Reading is ThinkingReading is Thinking

Sense ItSense It

Making Inferences Draw Conclusions

Making Inferences Draw Conclusions

Connect To TextConnect To Text

Ask QuestionsAsk Questions

Summarize SynthesizeSummarize Synthesize

Decide What is

ImportantDecide What is

Important

Build FluencyBuild Fluency

Expand VocabularyExpand Vocabulary

Predict and ProvePredict and Prove

Check UnderstandingCheck Understanding

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Source: “Reading Tips for Parents” Eufaula High SchoolKatrina Harris McNear

Page 4: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

Reading for MeaningIt is very important that children learn right from the start that reading is not just simply saying words (decoding). We read to get the author’s message. When children read for meaning, they will make good word choices at difficult parts of the story. Children need to know when their reading doesn’t make sense. Get them to STOP and go back and re read the part that didn’t make sense again.

If it doesn’t make sense…STOP…and go back and reread.

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Page 5: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

True or False?If children have a few simple reading strategies can this make a significant difference in helping children develop into good readers?

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Page 6: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

TRUEPutting a few simple strategies into action will make a significant difference in helping students develop into good readers .

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Page 7: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

Reading Strategies that help children learn to read.

There are a number of different strategies that you can use with a child when listening to them read aloud.REMEMBER THE MOST IMPORTANT ASPECT OF READING IS MEANING.

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Page 8: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

Book Talk

For a successful read it is important to orient your child to the book.

*Read the title and talk about the book

cover.

*Make a prediction about the story.

* Point out unfamiliar vocabulary.©reflectionsofateacher.com

Page 9: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

LOOK AT THE PICTURES)Pictures are important. Always allow your child to use the pictures to help him/her solve new words and gain meaning from the text.

For example ask “Is there something in the picture that helps you read that word?”

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Page 10: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

Point to the word

For emergent readers, allow them to point to the words. Move away from finger pointing when they reach levels 4-5 and let the eyes take over the process.

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Page 11: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

RECOGNISING SOUNDS!

Does your child recognise the beginning,

middle or end sound in the word?

Ask, “Can you think of a word that goes with

the picture and begins with that sound?”

Re-read quickly to see if the word works.

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Page 12: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

LOOK FOR WORD CHUNKS.

Ask your child to use their fingers to isolate a part of the word (a smaller word within a word OR a chunk that is known, i.e. /at/within “sat”.

For example “Cover the beginning” or “cover up the ending”, read the “chunk”. Uncover the other parts and blend them into the word.

Look for the words within the words.©reflectionsofateacher.com

Page 13: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

SKIP THE WORD… hop over the word.

If your child still doesn’t know the word, tell him/her, to hop over this word and read the rest of the sentence.When the child finishes the sentence say, “now read it again and your brain may just TELL you the word!” It is ok for the child to skip the word and read to the end of the sentence as long as they re-read the whole sentence.

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Page 14: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

Tell your child the word (when needed).

It is important to maintain the flow. This means we need to build fluency. Fluent readers are able to read orally with speed, accuracy and proper expression. If the book is too hard choose an easier book.

boy childrenHAPPY

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Page 15: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

SOME POINTERS…1. Praise the child! Tell them what

fabulous readers they are becoming!! Encourage the child to take risks, say “I know you can do it!”

2. If the reading material is too difficult (your child is struggling with many of the words on the page and THE MEANING OF THE STORY IS BEING LOST , it is more meaningful to read to the child and with the child. The child may need to find a lower level text.

Page 16: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

3. Reading books that are easy builds confidence and provides enjoyment.

4. Children often need adults to suggest a strategy to use until this becomes second nature. Independent use of the strategies happens at different rates for different children. You may need to prompt the child before they are able to use the strategies on their own.

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Page 17: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

HAVE FUN READING TOGETHER!

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Page 18: Parent Tips to help children to read. ©reflectionsofateacher.com

Thank you for downloading my powerpoint presentation “Parent Tips to Help Children to Read”.

Please visit my website/blog on www.reflectionsofateacher.com and follow my TpT store!

If you have any questions email me on [email protected]

Thanks again

Margaret

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