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sen10tious -> RE: Teaching you child to read (6/10/2008 9:01:27 AM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Beck34 Part of the problem is that when he reads, he guesses what the word is by the first sound of the word instead of trying to sound it out. Another problem that he has is that he skips over words that he doesn't know even when he reads silently. He comprehends the story okay, he is just having a hard time getting past sounding out the words that he doesn't know. He is very impatient in this.[&:] In that case, try emphasizing the chunking method suggested earlier. Sometimes, especially when kids are taught in reading in a classroom or group setting, the earlier phonics concepts get more emphasis than some of the later ones. It would be natural for a teacher to stress learning beginning sounds until everyone in the group knew them, but then to move on when most kids are reading the whole words. Without working with your son personally, I couldn’t know if this is the case, but I’ll just throw this story out there because it illustrates how some personality types create their own learning problems, even when their intelligence is fine— One of the hardest tutoring cases I’ve come across was a little girl who rigidly held to what she had already learned, holes and all. Whenever I tried to explain the new-to-her concepts to fill in the gaps, she’d insist that wasn’t the way her teacher at school did it. => So I was wondering if maybe just one time, a teacher told your son to skip a word he didn’t know, and that idea 'took hold' and now he thinks it is okay to skip? One thing I’ve found, especially among the 8-10 age group of poor readers, is that their brain may have matured more slowly; so while they are smart enough, they missed out on a couple years of the practice reading that mainstream readers would have had. It is understandable that some of these kids would get impatient and want to give up. Your role becomes even more important. If he was struggling to read one page in the same amount of class time that others read five pages, then they were exposed to five times more words. It will take practice to catch up. Based on your description of his problem, I’d suggest you spend between 5 to 10 minutes a day practicing chunking, looking at word endings, reviewing vocabulary from common words he missed before, and then spend another half-hour reading to him with him following along. If he is reading along at the normal speed of speech, he’ll be seeing and hearing a lot more words in context than if he were trying to sound it all out on his own. You can test to make sure he is following along by stopping a time or two on each page and having him read the next word.
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