I think it is awesome that she is interested in reading at such a young age! I am an English teacher for preschool and the lower elementary level in a non-english speaking country and although these kids are older they don't know the language so I think they would be at a similar level. After teaching consonants and short vowel sounds you should move to long vowel sounds ending in e: long a: make
long i: fine
long o: rope
long u: flute
Another suggestion is to buy "Hooked on Phonics" I have used it with private students and it helps not only with their fluency but with their comprehension. If you can't afford this you can go to this site:
http://www.sfreading.com/
check on teacher resources and you can have access to the whole series of reading books for free, the neatness of this is that you can use it as a plan on how to tackle the rest of the sounds.
I have lots of other tips and ideas about how to keep going after this, you can e-mail me if you want to know more about this.
2006-11-10 12:55:04
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answer #1
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answered by jenny 4
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2016-12-24 20:39:26
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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(I'm a reading specialist) Actually, learning to read can occur in the same natural way that one learns to speak a language, if the activity is fun and emotionally satisfying. Stick to making a reading a cozy, shared activity with your daughter, teach her sounds and words as she becomes curious about them, but make enjoying the story the prime objective--the fact that you have been so successful at making reading such a wonderful activity is the very reason she wants to learn how to do it.
Research-wise, most kids who come from normal, literate homes end up at close to the same reading level by second grade regardless of when they learned their initial skills. If your daughter is particularly gifted (as she must be to be so self-motivated at such a young age) she will easily learn whole words at a young age and will begin to ask about sounds or learn them in context. Don't push direct phonics instruction too early. Reading is ultimately not simply stringing sounds together, but using phonics, context, and background knowledge to make meaning. Early learning will not give her an edge, but being a child who loves to read will. Good luck.
2006-11-10 18:29:03
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answer #3
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answered by wizbet 1
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Add /e/ to make short long "pan" to "pane"
She's 2 1/2?! Well sorry to break this to you but she isn't learning in the "proper order" as most 5 year olds can't do that!
It's great she is motivated- feed her need! I'm gonna guess she will eat up anything you give her in any order! Put the library on your list of weekly activities, they are going to get to know you real wel!!!! :)
The real problem you will face will be with the school/teachers trying to hold her back and telling you she has to learn their way!
You better start looking into your neighborhood schools to see which ones are known to handle gifted kids...
Don't ever let anyone hold her enthusiasm for learning back!
2006-11-10 17:37:50
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answer #4
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answered by atheleticman_fan 5
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First, if you know where you will be sending your daughter to school, you may want to call and ask about its reading program. And if you are a tax payer, perhaps ask to borrow a book or two for your daughter. Otherwise, I would suggest the long vowel sounds and word families.
2006-11-10 12:48:05
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answer #5
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answered by Moxie Crimefighter 6
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Phonetics and reading are related but not the same.
Below is a site for Dolch words. This is a list of 220 sight words...no nouns. They are the most common everyday words we use in reading. Follow the directions. These should be used with her regular stories. It is not a list to be memorized but to be used as reinforcement.
Check it out:
http://www.theschoolbell.com/Links/Dolch/Dolch.html
2006-11-10 21:53:47
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answer #6
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answered by tichur 7
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It's possible to spend lots of time and income searching for methods to train your kids how to read and improve their examining skills. Is hard to show a small kid how to learn, and actually enticing them to learn is difficult in itself. However it does not need to be like that because you got the aid of the program https://tr.im/dun31 , Children Learning Reading program.
With Children Learning Reading you will show your youngster how to split up sounds and separate phrases in to phonemes, an important issue when your kid is merely learning to spell.
The reading process from Children Learning Reading program allows you for children to learn easily and properly, from simple phrases to phrases until they understand to see stories.
2016-04-27 15:42:29
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answer #7
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answered by ? 3
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