Parent Connection |
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Promoting Early Writing Development At Home |
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Most parents know that reading to children is important, but often times, writing is overlooked. In fact, reading and writing go hand in hand. Like reading, writing is developmental and your child will want to have fun with the writing tools he or she sees others using. Allowing your child to play with writing, using crayons or pencils, reinforces awareness of print, develops the muscles necessary for writing, and helps him or her see the relationship between spoken and written words. When your child sees others writing for various reasons, he or she will be more motivated to practice their own writing. Make a Grocery List
Dictate a Story/Create a Book
Helping your child with writing at an early age will help him or her begin the journey to become a lifelong reader and writer. In order to develop as writers, children must walk a fine line between working independently and asking for support. Remember, it is fine to offer assistance, and always great to encourage. However, always keep in mind that it is best to children lead you to where they are ready to be led. As literacy researcher Anne Hass Dyson says, “We want to guide but not smother the emerging voices of our children.” -Submitted by the Willow Road Reading Team |
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Promoting Nonfiction Reading and Writing at Home |
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Written by Annemarie Gunn, Claudia Santucci, and Eileen Wallace Passion is contagious. If parents, relatives, and friends share their hobbies and interests with children, they will want to explore them as well. With a little time and enthusiasm on the part of a parent, a child can develop a natural interest in reading and writing nonfiction. There are many fun learning activities which families can participate in, to improve children’s reading and writing skills, as well as strengthen familial relationships and create lifelong memories. The best part is that many types of learning activities already take place in our households. It’s just about being aware of these learning opportunities as they arise.
Record family memories
“Surf the Web” together
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What’s in the News? |
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| News papers are a form of daily communication with the outside world, and provide lots of learning activities for children. | |
What you’ll need: |
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What to do: Clip out an interesting news story and cut the paragraphs apart. Ask your child to read the paragraphs and put them in order. Ask your child to read a short editorial printed in your local newspaper and to underline all the facts with a green pencil and all the opinions with an orange pencil. Pictures fascinate children of all ages. Clip pictures in the newspaper. Ask your child to tell you about the picture or list adjectives to describe the picture. Do you take your child to the movies? Have your child first look up the movie page by using the index in the newspaper. After a movie has been chosen, have your child study the picture or text in the ad and tell you what he or she thinks the movie is about. Have your child pick a headline and turn it into a question. Then the child can read the article to see if the question is answered. Ask your child to clip food coupons from the newspaper for your grocery shopping trips. First, talk about which products you use and which you do not. Then the child can cut out the right coupons and put them into categories such as drinks and breakfast items. You can then cash in the coupons at the store. Pick out an interesting article from the newspaper. As you prepare lunch or dinner, tell your child that you are busy and ask him or her to read the article to you. Submitted by: E. Abballe, S. Fleischer, M. Vella |
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Using Technology to Support Your Child’s Reading By The Howell Road Reading Team |
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| As we all know, parents and teachers are partners in supporting their child’s reading and education. As reading specialists, we have done many workshops throughout the years and these are some questions that consistently come up: | |
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“How can I choose a ‘just-right’ book?” “How can I motivate my child to read?” “How do I know that my child understands what he/she is reading?” |
There are some valuable websites that can help you answer these questions and enhance your child’s reading as they progress through their school career. One such website that we would recommend is Tumble Books. It is wonderful for those busy times when you are unable to sit down and read with your child. On this website your child will be able to choose a book, have it read to him/her and then choose one of the fun activities related to the book. This can be reached through our district website www.valleystream13.com. After accessing the website, you must click on the Our Schools tab and the link Online Resources. On the lower right-hand side of the Valley Stream webpage, you will find Online Subscriptions, scroll down to Tumble Books and click. This will bring you to the website www.tumblebooks.com. Once you have arrived, you can enter the name of a book or click on any of the available links! Another great website that you can access is www.rif.org. Once you reach this website, click on the purple parent link. This will direct you to the portion of the website that offers many great articles such as, “Motivating Kids to Read”. Please remember we are always available for any questions! Remember: Reading is Thinking!
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| The Home School Connection |
Early Literacy Games for Sight Words |
| Sight words, or high frequency words, are those words that students encounter frequently in reading and writing. They are encountered so often that only ten words account for 25% of all words used. In addition, 100 words account for 60% of all words used in our reading and writing. What makes these words more difficult for students to master is that many of them do not follow the typical phonetic rules nor do they have easy spelling patterns. However, they appear so frequently in all kinds of text, that students need to have automatic recognition of them in order to become independent, fluent readers. In order to help students instantly recognize common sight words, we have provided some fun, multi-sensory activities. This will give children the opportunity to retain a difficult sight word by experiencing and manipulating it. Below is a list of some motivational games through which you can assist your child in practicing these important words. You can access a list of sight words on www.learningbooks.net and click on free flash cards for Dolch sight words. It’s a good idea to concentrate on two words per week when doing these activities. |
*Read a story and see how many times you can see your words. *Print your words with your fingers five or more times in flour, salt or sugar. *Use your favorite snack to shape your words and then eat them. *Tape record yourself saying and spelling your words. *Use colored chalk to write your words on the sidewalk. *Spread peanut butter on bread and add raisins to form your words. *Paint your words using water colors or finger paint. *Write your words in shaving cream. *Find the letters of your words in a newspaper. Cut out the letters and spell your words. *Use beans, pasta or rice to form your words. Glue them to construction paper or tag board. *Read a letter from the mail and look for your words and list them. *Write three or more words that rhyme with each of your words. |
We hope you enjoy these “exsighting” activities with your children! |