don't teach too late or he/she will be behind other kids
2006-07-07 14:52:24
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Check-out Brian Ray's information at http://www.nheri.org/
He's done a lot of research on home education and would have far more resources than I.
My personal experience, having taught my three children, is that there is no one right age to teach a child to read.
My two daughters were both reading by age 6, my son didn't get it until about age 8. (This isn't unusual for boys, they have "other
things" to do, but it certainly isn't a hard and fast rule. I've known my share of girls who just weren't ready to read until they were older.
As to advantage...I'm not quite sure what you are asking. I can say that the fact that my children have been able to read well has served them better than what age they learned to read. ; )
2006-07-07 11:45:08
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answer #2
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answered by tantiemeg 6
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Kids will learn to read when they are ready - forcing some artificially standard on them before hand will only make them dislike the the task. For me, it didn't click until i was 9 1/2, and now I love to read. I think the best way to get them interested is by seeing mom/dad read. Let the kids develop at their own pace, it will work out must better in the long run.
2006-07-08 18:54:45
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answer #3
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answered by trinitytough 5
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I can tell you from personal experience.
I have 2 neices the same age. At 5 years old one taught herself to read (now reads beyond her grade level at 9), the other said "I don't need to know that yet. I will learn that in school next year" and she learned how to read at 6
My oldest child could recognize many words at 4 and at 5 taught herself to read - and the baby - almost 3 is spelling and recognizing many words and memorizes books and repeats them back to us.
I think kids learn to read when they are interested. I found with my kids the single biggest thing that inspired them to learn was playing on the computer. There is a particularly good web site for reading too: http://www.starfall.com/
This site really walks kids through the phonics and rules of reading in fun and creative ways, with songs, stories, games. My kids can't get enough and the whole house know all the songs.
I think it is helpful for kids to learn at their own pace, and this kind of site can make learning so much fun. Check it out.
Peace!
2006-07-07 16:12:54
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answer #4
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answered by carole 7
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The best age to teach reading is when the window opens up in the kid's brain. It's like walking.
What you can do if you want to stimulate them now is read your kid(s) a story and move your finger along under the words.
As to the question of waiting, it completely depends on the kid.
2006-07-11 09:27:22
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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because you've discovered out of your previous thoughts, i imagine it really is high quality that you may coach out of your previous, to be difficulty-free in sharing with them the blunders you've made. merely save your language and documents at a PG or PG-13 element. you should properly be difficulty-free without being too picture. The Bible tells of the blunders of its maximum proper heroes: Moses, David, Abraham, Solomon, Peter, et al. Why ought to you attempt to seem proper? The Bible even shows the weak, a lot less-than-really moments from Jesus. certain, he changed into sinless, yet he changed into nevertheless human to boot as divine.
2016-11-01 09:45:01
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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I begun reading at 4 and I think it was good to me
2006-07-07 10:48:25
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answer #7
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answered by zaaterah 4
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start at birth
2006-07-07 12:27:15
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answer #8
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answered by cabcp 3
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