1 / 18

Keep Your Children Reading Over The Summer!

Keep Your Children Reading Over The Summer!. How Can You Keep Your Child Reading Over the Summer Months?. Tap into their interests Create an expectation of daily reading within summer routine Research before going on vacations Create a neighborhood book club for kids.

Download Presentation

Keep Your Children Reading Over The Summer!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Keep Your Children Reading Over The Summer!

  2. How Can You Keep Your Child Reading Over the Summer Months? • Tap into their interests • Create an expectation of daily reading within summer routine • Research before going on vacations • Create a neighborhood book club for kids. • Model reading, read together, discuss • Listen to books electronically • Read poetry

  3. Avoid the Summer Slide! • Children who read over the summer do better in school. • Summer Slide is a term that is used to describe educational setbacks that occur over the summer months. • Reading is a life skill and skills need repeated practice. • “Children who read over the summer months often gain, rather than lose, important skills.” Summer Slide CBS Video

  4. Find The Reading Level of Your Child Lexile.com video for find the reading level of child. (http://www.lexile.com/about-lexile/lexile-video/) (http://www.lexile.com/) by inputting a lexile range, a person can find a book by lexile level and genre. International Reading Association (http://www.reading.org/InformationFor/Parents.aspx) Helpful hints for parents and reading with their children KidsReads (www.kidsreads.com) -annotated list of age appropriate books American Library Association - Award Winning Titles Reading Rockets- Themed lists of books Education World -fun activities to go along with books

  5. Choosing the ‘Just Right’ book Five Finger Rule • Choose a book that you think you will enjoy • See the font size whether it is comfortable or not • Read the first page • Hold up a finger for each word you are not sure of, or don’t know • If there are five or more words you did not know, you should choose an easier book.

  6. Too Easy • Books that are too easy are good to read sometimes to help build fluency. Children will read them with 100% accuracy.

  7. Just Right • Books that are just right help children to use the skills and strategies they are learning at school to help them figure out words. Children can read these books with 95-100% accuracy.

  8. Too Hard • Books that are too hard need to be read to children. Reading books that are too hard cause frustration. Books that children read at 89% accuracy or below are too hard.

  9. If your child wants to read a book that is too hard… • Tell them we can read the book together. • This is a book you will enjoy more if you save it until you are older--or later in the year. • When people read books that are too hard for them, they often skip important parts. You will have more fun with this book if you wait until you can read it easily.

  10. Use Summer Fun to Build Background Knowledge • Take Summer field trips:- to the park, the zoo, hike • Talk about it:- talk about the things you see, ask questions • Follow up with a book:- find out what interests your child and visit the library to get more information

  11. 10 Non-book Ways to Get Your Child Reading • Play board games • Collect trading cards and read the backs • Learn how to--read instructions • Get cooking--read recipes • Make cards--write personal messages

  12. 10 Non-book Ways to Get Your Child Reading Cont.. • Create signs and labels to identify things in his/her room. • Take a road trip--read travel directions. • Put on a play--read lines. • Write messages for your child to read. • Host a scavenger hunt--provide written clues that lead to a small treasure.

  13. Ways to Incorporate Math into the Summer Routine • Board games • Shopping (let children pay and complete the transaction.) • Using a calendar and counting days, grouping weeks etc. • Play “I Spy” with shapes, multiples of…,etc.. • Ask questions about time (How long until?, elapsed time questions etc..) • Daily math questions on white board in kitchen • Cooking (let children help in the cooking process. Allow them to measure and find equivalents.) • Reading Maps (especially if going on a road trip.) • Estimation (create estimation jars, estimation questioning with bags of food)

  14. BOOKS • http://www.oxfordowl.co.uk/Library/Index/?AgeGroup=1 • http://www.openculture.com/2011/09/popular_high_school_books_available_as_free_ebooks_audiobooks.html • http://www.allbooksfree.com/childrens.htm • http://freekidsbooks.org/filter/all/date/DESC • http://www.childrensbooksforever.com/index.html • http://schoollibrary.com/Default.aspx • http://www.getfreeebooks.com/?tag=children

  15. SOURCES • Leveled Booklists • Read, Write, Think • reading rockets video-Ron Fairchild • A Love for Reading Video YouTube • Ways to Avoid the Summer Slide • CBS News Summer Slide Video • Motivating Children to Read, Think and Learn Over the Summer Months • Choosing a Just Right Bookmark

  16. Additional Websites • Http://school.familyeducation.com • http://www2.scholastic.com/browse/parentsHome.jsp • www.readingrockets.org

  17. Math Websites IXL - www.ixl.com NCTM’s (National Council of Teachers of Mathematics) Illuminations - http://illuminations.nctm.org/ Number Nut - http://www.numbernut.com/ Mr. Nussbaum - http://www.mrnussbaum.com/mathcode.htm Everyday Math Apps- http://idevbooks.com/apps/index_everyday.php

  18. “We shouldn't teach great books, we should teach a love of reading.” - B F Skinner A Love For Reading Video

More Related