How to Teach Your Baby to Read
Teaching your baby to read is
becoming more and more high priority for parents now as it becomes clear that
learning to read at a young age offers numerous advantages for the child once
he or she begins school. Studies have consistently found that teaching a baby
to read and helping children develop phonemic awareness well before entering
school can significantly improve their development in reading and spelling.
However, when it comes to teaching babies to read, there are two main teaching
methods.
These two main methods of
teaching a baby or child to read are the whole language method, and the phonics
and phonemic awareness method (the phonetic approach), which should be the
preferred teaching method in helping children learn to read. Some prefer the
whole language method, while others use the phonics approach, and there are
also educator that use a mix of different approaches. With the Look-say
approach of whole language learning, a child begins with memorizing sight
words, and then taught various strategies of figuring out the text from various
clues.
The whole language method
produces inaccurate and poor readers compared to students of the phonetic
approach. Using the whole word approach, English is being taught as an
ideographic language such as Chinese. One of the biggest arguments from
whole-language advocates is that teaching a baby to read using phonics breaks
up the words into letters and syllables, which have no actual meaning, yet they
fail to acknowledge the fact that once the child is able to decode the word,
they are able to actually READ that entire word, pronounce it, and understand
its meaning. So in practicality, it's a very weak argument. English is an
alphabetic system, and unlike Chinese, it is not an ideograph like Chinese
characters, and should not be taught using an ideographic approach.
I always say that if your baby can
speak, then you can begin to teach your baby to read. I won't mention any names
here, but I think most parents are probably aware of one very popular
"reading" program, which is a whole word approach. Using this method,
your baby simply learns to memorize the words without actually reading the
words. There is no scientific evidence to suggest that teaching your baby to
read using the whole word approach is an effective method. In fact, there are
large numbers of studies which have consistently stated that teaching children
to reading using phonemic awareness is a highly effective method.
Teaching phonemic awareness to
children significantly improves their reading more than instruction that lacks
any attention to phonemic awareness. - statement made by the National Reading
Panel [1]
I do think that the debate on the
effectiveness of teaching a baby to read using either the whole language or
phonics method is settled by the statements made by the National Reading Panel.
They reviewed over 1,960 different studies to make their conclusions.
In fact, while my wife was
pregnant with our first child, I began doing extensive research on the subject
on how to teach my baby to read - after birth, of course. Like most parents I
also came across the popular whole word teaching approach being heavily
marketed. Seeing the infomercials got me quite excited actually, seeing the
babies on TV "reading". But after trying it out, it occurred to me
that the our baby wasn't actually "reading", but actually "memorizing",
and I thought to myself, how are my children supposed to read newer, and more
complicated words as they grow older without an appropriate method of decoding
those words? This is where my long and extensive research into phonics and
phonemic awareness began.
After many hours of research and
learning as much as I could, I felt comfortable enough with our simple phonemic
awareness teaching method, that my wife and I began giving brief 3 to 5 minute
lessons to our daughter, aged 2 years and 8 months. Within just a few short
weeks, her reading ability (and I mean actual reading ability, not
memorization) was astounding, even for me as the parent who gave the reading
instructions. Friends and family alike, were simply flabbergasted at what our
daughter was capable of reading at just 2 years and 11 months. Please watch the
video above, composed of clips of her reading randomly created sentences for
reading fun.
I simply can't imagine this kind
of progress possible with the whole word approach - just think of the tens and
hundreds of words a young child would have to memorize!
Our son is fast approaching the
age where he will soon be able to speak, and we will be using the same simple
step-by-step method to teach him to read. If you'd like to learn more about our
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