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the child who knows how to write abc....z &12......100 how to teach them further & refer some books for child of 5-6 yrs

2006-08-12 04:48:17 · 10 answers · asked by pnakaj k 1 in Education & Reference Primary & Secondary Education

10 answers

get a gamecube, and buy the game animal crossing.. you write letters, and while doing so, they game speaks the letters you are typing in. one woman taught her diseased son how to read that way...forgot his illness...but anyway yeah do that.

2006-08-12 04:51:40 · answer #1 · answered by Billy C 3 · 0 0

Very Simple

Get the child some books / illustrated Comic strips which he can relate to or understand. Try to find what the child's interests are.
Start with Lee Falk,s Phantom , Mandrake the magician.
I do not know the back ground of your child, but if he/she can understand the English way of life, start with Enid Blyton.
Join him to a Library/ a Reading Room or A Book Club. He shall be proud of his membership. Let him taste the words, the language, the style> I bet, You will find he will develop.
Do not dictate to them what they should read and what they should not.
Then 'bout writing, sent him off to school.

2006-08-12 05:33:22 · answer #2 · answered by udayakumar k 2 · 0 0

Children are more successful in school when parents take an active interest in homework, according to a statement issued by the American Academy of Pediatrics. When parents show an interest in homework, children learn that what they do is important to their parents. Helping with homework can have many benefits for children. And who knows? Parents might even learn a thing or two!

How to Help
Get to know your child's teacher. Attend school events, such as parent-teacher conferences, to meet your child's teacher. Ask about his or her homework policy and how you should be involved.
Set up a homework-friendly area. Make sure your child has a well-lit place to complete homework. Place supplies - paper, pencils, glue, scissors - within reach.
Schedule a regular study time. Some children work best in the afternoon, following a snack and play period; others may prefer to wait until after dinner.
Keep the distractions to a minimum. This means no television, no loud music, and no phone calls. (Occasionally, though, a phone call to a classmate about an assignment could prove helpful.)
Make sure your child does his own work. Children will not learn if they don't think for themselves and make their own mistakes. Parents can make suggestions and help children with directions. Your child's job is to do the learning.
Get involved in your child's academic career. Ask him about assignments, quizzes, and tests. Check his completed homework, and make yourself available for his questions and concerns.
Set a good example. Does your child see you reading the newspaper, writing letters, or reading a book? Children are more likely to follow their parents' examples than their advice.
Praise his work and recognize his efforts. Stick his math assignment or art project on the refrigerator. Mention his achievements in science to relatives.
If your child has continuing problems with homework, talk with his teacher. It may be that he is having trouble seeing the board, or perhaps requires evaluation for a learning disorder or attention disorder.
Reviewed by: Steven Dowshen, MD
Date reviewed: May 2005

2006-08-12 04:55:22 · answer #3 · answered by jeanclaudefan 3 · 1 0

You don't make a child read or write. You teach them by reading and writing youfselff and with them.

My daughter is 3 1/2 and reads books with me she knows the letters and numbers. She writes her name. You have to work with them. You what them to enjoy it not hate it.

2006-08-12 04:58:32 · answer #4 · answered by Stac 2 · 0 0

The best way to teach a child to read is to read to them for an hour every evening. Try to move out of children's literature as soon as you can to books with rich vocabularies.

2006-08-12 07:38:59 · answer #5 · answered by Alan Turing 5 · 0 0

Just keep reading to them every day. Your
teacher can even provide you with a list of
books that are for 5 -6 years. The same is
true for writing skills.

2006-08-12 13:15:33 · answer #6 · answered by tychi 4 · 0 0

each and every newborn is diverse, yet maximum children are not waiting to study and write till they are 5 or 6. in accordance to Waldorf faculties children should not be predicted to position in writing or study till they are 8 years previous. My son is in a Montessori and he will be turning 6 in October, he purely at the moment realized to position in writing his own call and in accordance to his instructor he's a lot in the back of the different Montessori scholars who were examining and writing at 3 a million/2 years previous. i don't think of you want to rigidity, 3 is extremely youthful and that i have not yet met a three twelve months previous who can write. also, do no longer ignore that in existence anybody is a critic and each and every instructor has a countless attitude, even if their factors are valid or no longer. the only component you may assume is that whatever your newborn will capture up and study the needed skills of examining and writing. clone of she realized to move slowly, stand and walk. How good she will be in a position to be at it, can in hardship-free words be responded in time.

2016-11-29 23:43:14 · answer #7 · answered by daddow 3 · 0 0

well first you should read books to them get them into it and when your son/daughter starts really staring at the images or trying to read with you then you should [I don't know the word] bribe them you should say if you can read this full page Ill give you this treat, worked for me.

2006-08-12 04:54:02 · answer #8 · answered by big bear 2 · 0 0

PARENTAL PARTICIPATION. Read to the child and let the child read to you.

2006-08-12 04:55:10 · answer #9 · answered by snvffy 7 · 0 0

you have to start with books with pictures, that is how young kids like to visualize

2006-08-12 04:53:44 · answer #10 · answered by YourDreamDoc 7 · 0 0

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