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Helping Your Child Learn to Readwith activities for children from infancy through age 10By Bernice Cullinan and Brod Baggert Foreword"Why?"This is the question we parents are always trying to answer. It's good that children ask questions: that's the best way to learn. All children have two wonderful resources for learning--imagination and curiosity. As a parent, you can awaken your children to the joy of learning by encouraging their imagination and curiosity. Helping Your Child Learn to Read is one in a series of books on different education topics intended to help you make the most of your child's natural curiosity. Teaching and learning are not mysteries that can only happen in school. They also happen when parents and children do simple things together. For instance, you and your child can: sort the socks on laundry day-sorting is a major function in math and science; cook a meal together-cooking involves not only math and science but good health as well; tell and read each other stories--storytelling is the basis for reading and writing (and a story about the past is also history); or play a game of hopscotch together playing physical games will help your child learn to count and start on a road to lifelong fitness. By doing things together, you will show that learning is fun and important. You will be encouraging your child to study, learn, and stay in school. All of the books in this series tie in with the National Education Goals set by the President and the Governors, The goals state that, by the year 2000: every child will start school ready to learn; at least 90 percent of all students will graduate from high school; each American student will leave the 4th, 8th, and 12th grades demonstrating competence in core subjects; U.S. students will be first in the world in math and science achievement; every American adult will be literate, will have the skills necessary to compete in a global economy, and will be able to exercise the rights and responsibilities of citizenship; and American schools will be liberated from drugs and violence so they can focus on learning. This book is a way for you to help meet these goals. It will give you a short rundown on facts, but the biggest part of the book is made up of simple, fun activities for you and your child to do together. Your child may even beg you to do them. At the end of the book is a list of resources, so you can continue the fun. Let's get started. We invite you to find an activity in this book and try it. ContentsForewordIntroduction The Basics Start Young and Stay with It Advertise the Joy of Reading! Remember When You Were Very Young Home Is Where the Heart Is Important Things To Know It's Part of Life One More Time Talking about Stories The More the Merrier How Do I Use This Book? Read Along Look for Books Books and Babies R and R: Repetition and Rhyme Poetry in Motion Read to Me Family Reading Time Story Talk Write and Talk, Too Tot Talk What's in a Name? World of Words Book Nooks Family Stories Now Hear This P.S. I Love You Easy as Pie Write On TV Make a Book Make Your Own Dictionary Parents and the Schools A Postscript about Older Children Resources Acknowledgments
To read the chapters click on the links below... |