Teaching Children to Read and Write
Most parents, at one point or
another, frets over the education and the development of their children. Many
concerned parents research and seek information on the topic of teaching
children to read and write. I for one, am glad to see so many parents wanting
to get an early start for their children in reading and writing, because
studies have shown that developing these abilities early on before entering
school provides numerous benefits and advantages later on as the child
progresses through school.
More worrisome should be the fact
that over one third, 38% to be exact, of all grade 4 students cannot even
achieve a basic level of reading ability according to the National Assessment
of Educational Progress (NAEP). This is an alarming statistic. Will your child
become one of the 38% who cannot reach basic reading achievement by grade 4?
For most children, this poor ability to read can be easily prevented with early
phonemic awareness teaching.
Reading must begin early in the life
of a child, whether it is just an alphabet letter, a word, a sentence, a
paragraph, or a story. Teaching children how to read must begin early on, and
children should be exposed to books, stories, rhymes, and be read to on a daily
basis. Children as young as 2 years old can learn to read if you teach them to
read with the proper instructions. Please watch the video below of a 2 year 11
months old reading randomly constructed sentences
.
As Lida Williams said, almost 100
years ago:
Phonics is not a method of
teaching reading, but it is a
necessary part of every good, modern method. It is the key to
word mastery, and word mastery is one of the first essentials in learning to
read. A knowledge of the sounds of letters, and of the effect of the position
of the letter upon its sound, is an essential means of mastering the mechanics
of reading, and of enabling children to become independent readers.
100 years later, this still holds
true. There has been a great debate on what method of teaching is best to teach
children how to read: whether phonics or the whole language method is better.
The whole language learning to read method is more of a "word
memorization" plan, where a young child is supposed to memorize the
"shape" of the word, and say it.
It is important to distinguish
the difference between phonological awareness and phonemic awareness. Phonological awareness is
very broad, and includes phonemic awareness as a sub category. Phonemic
awareness is very narrow, and it is only focused on the phonemes, which are the
individual sounds of letters. There are no shortage of studies which have
repeatedly found and concluded that teaching phonemic awareness to young
children produces exceptional reading and spelling abilities. You can read more
aboutresearch on phonemic awareness here.
The whole language method simply
expects a child to "read" when presented reading material, and by
memorizing sight words. The phonics method is a bottom up approach where you
teach children to read in a logical and sequential order. You first teach
children the alphabet letters and the sounds they represent; then you teach
children to combine (or blend) various letter sounds together to form words;
which is then followed by reading sentences and simple stories. This is a
logical progression for children learning to read, where they develop accuracy
in decoding words and pronouncing words. This method of teaching also helps the
child to spell correctly.
There's no doubt that phonics and
phonemic awareness instruction is the superior method to teach children how to
read. We have successfully used phonemic awareness instructions to teach our
children at age 2 to read words, sentences, paragraphs, and simple story books.
If you would like to learn about our simple, step-by-step method to teach your
children to read and write, please click below:
Teach your child to read today using our step-by-step,proven method for teaching young children to read
Comments
Post a Comment