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Motivating readers Reading in school Reading at home Comprehension skills

Helping your Child to Read. Motivating readers Reading in school Reading at home Comprehension skills. The book holds the key…. Books you liked as a child – build the excitement…e.g. Robot Doesn’t always follow that they’ll like what you like! Novelty books Kick! Pop up books Holograms

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Motivating readers Reading in school Reading at home Comprehension skills

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  1. Helping your Child to Read Motivating readers Reading in school Reading at home Comprehension skills

  2. The book holds the key… • Books you liked as a child – build the excitement…e.g. Robot • Doesn’t always follow that they’ll like what you like! • Novelty books Kick! Pop up books Holograms • Lego books • Rhyming books – Dr Seuss

  3. Motivating readers

  4. Motivating children • Research out about different authors • Visit the library or book shop • Listen to stories on tape/CD’s • http://www.audible.co.uk/cat/535836031

  5. http://info.firstnews.co.uk/ • Share books and other forms of print

  6. Motivating children • If your child has a particular interest, you could visit the IBIS- the owner can always recommend a good read • Sharing picture books

  7. Sharing quality texts

  8. http://www.oxfordowl.co.uk/EBooks/The_Little_Red_Hen/index.htmlhttp://www.oxfordowl.co.uk/EBooks/The_Little_Red_Hen/index.html • E-books

  9. Listening to storieshttp://www.oup.com/oxed/primary/oxfordreadingtree/traditional_tales/support/

  10. https://online.surreycc.gov.uk/esuite/esuite.nsf/openOnlineForm?open&fcunid=57D1809619D68F5F802572A3003B6184https://online.surreycc.gov.uk/esuite/esuite.nsf/openOnlineForm?open&fcunid=57D1809619D68F5F802572A3003B6184 Ask the penguin http://www.surreycc.gov.uk/people-and-community/libraries/library-services-for-children-and-teens/the-childrens-library/book-buzz Book Buzz

  11. Encourage your child to discuss the books that they bring home • Encourage your child to discuss favourite authors and compare authors

  12. Praise your child for reading longer books • Ask your child for his/her opinion of the book

  13. Play “Boggle” or other word games • Practise “tricky” words and sounds as often as possible

  14. Surrey Libraries

  15. Reading at school • Shared Reading • Guided Reading • Individual Reading • Quiet Reading • Paired Reading

  16. Organisation of books

  17. Helping children learn to read

  18. Early Reading Skills In order to become good readers, children need to: - be read stories - share books - predict story from pictures - learn that reading in English is from left to write - know the letter sounds (phonics)

  19. How do children learn to read? • Pupils become successful readers by learning to use a range of strategies to get at the meaning of a text • Recognising and understanding the words on the page is no guarantee that the text will be understood.

  20. Letters and Sounds • 10 – 15 minute daily session • Children grouped according to ability • Recognising sounds • Reading tricky words on sight • Blending for reading • Segmenting for spelling • Applying skills – reading or writing a sentence

  21. Using the new books to support work in letters and sounds.

  22. ORT Phonics

  23. Pearson's Bug Club

  24. Pearson's Bug Club

  25. Strategies for Reading • Sound out the word • Use pictures • Miss the word, read to the end of the sentence, go back and think what would make sense • Check reading makes sense The lion was laying in the sun.

  26. It is well recognised that children vary in the ease with which they can decode. They also vary in their listening comprehension, and consequently in their reading comprehension. An effective reader has good word reading and good listening comprehension skills, as shown in the upper right quadrant of the figure below. Poor reading comprehension can occur with or without poor word reading, as shown in both lower quadrants of the figure (see Nation, 2005).

  27. Improving reading with guided reading

  28. Principles of Guided Reading • Children are grouped by ability and read at least once a week • Specific reading strategies to focus on are determined by teacher • Aims to encourage and extend independent reading skills

  29. Guided Reading Teaching Sequence: • Book introduction (adult with group) • Strategy check (adult with group) • Independent reading (individual) • Returning to text (adult with group) • Response to text (adult with group) • Re-reading guided texts (individuals)

  30. Children can improve their reading by: • Correcting mistakes faster • Using expression • Noticing and using punctuation marks • Reading at a faster pace with greater fluency • Identifying interesting words • Showing an interest in longer texts • Skim and scanning texts

  31. Assessing reading • Teachers assess children's reading regularly, using Benchmarking and teacher assessments, and move children to the next colour band when appropriate • Children should be reading 90-95% of the text accurately • Children need to be able to understand what they have read and be able to answer questions about the text

  32. Comprehension

  33. Comprehension • Children need to have a good understanding of what they have read. • Ask questions about the text • Find evidence in the text • Discuss likes/dislikes • Predict what might happen next

  34. Blooms Taxonomy Dr Bloom identified that people learn and operate with multiple levels of thinking

  35. Knowledge Recall questions Where does the story take place? When did the story take place? What did s/he/it look like? Who was s/he/it? Where did s/he/it live? Who are the characters in the book? Where in the book would you find…?

  36. Comprehension Simple comprehension questions What do you think is happening here? What happened in the story? What might this mean? Through whose eyes is the story told? Which part of the story best describes the setting? What words and/or phrases do this? What part of the story do you like best?

  37. New booksOxford Reading Tree

  38. The Pearson range have additional information about the author, or tips on reading the book or ways to find out more about the topic.

  39. Question- examples (hand-out)

  40. A finishing thought…

  41. Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at an Elingsh uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer is at the rghit pclae. The rset can be a toatl mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae we do not raed ervey lteter by it slef but the wrod as a wlohe.

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