
Parents
play a very important part in their children’s learning from the
moment children are born. Because everything is new to an infant, every
waking hour brings opportunities to learn new things. Young children
acquire knowledge through all of their senses—sight, hearing,
touch, taste and smell.
The following six early reading skills form the base
of what your child will use to learn to read and write. Children
who enter school with more of these skills will benefit more
from reading instruction that they receive at school.
"Print Motivation" is a child's interest in and enjoyment of books.
Why is it important?
Children who enjoy books and reading will be curious about
how to read. They will read more. Children become good readers
by practicing.
The more pleasurable book sharing is, the more regular and frequent
an activity it will become.
Bedtime
Stories Todd
Parr Books
Tom
Arma Books
"Vocabulary" is knowing the names of things.
Why is it important?
Children need to know the meaning of words to understand what
you are reading.
You know if you are reading a word correctly if you have heard it before. You
are sounding it out. (Try sounding out the word "carrot.") The more
words children hear, the more ready they will be to make connections when they
read.
New
Words for Baby Colors Animals Things
that Go
"Narrative
Skills" is being
able to understand and tell stories and being able to describe
things.
Why is it important?
Narrative skills help children to understand what they are
learning to read.
Maisy
Series The
Spot Series
Baby
Stories
"Print Awareness" is noticing
print everywhere; knowing how to handle a book, knowing how
we follow the words on a page.
Why is it important?
This skill helps children feel comfortable with books so they
can concentrate on reading. English books open right to
left, read left to right and top to bottom.
Signs in My World Byron
Barton Books
"Letter Knowledge" is learning that letters are
different from each other, that each letter has a name, and that specific
sounds go with specific letters
Why is it important?
This skill is the basis for learning to read.
Baby
ABCs
Touch
and Feel Books
"Phonological
Awareness" is the ability
to hear and play with the smaller sounds in words.
Why is it important?
This skill helps children sound out words as they begin to
read. Understanding that words are made up of smaller sounds
helps children “break the code” between written language (letters) and spoken language (sounds).
Nursery Rhymes
Finger Play Lullabies Baby Games Music
The above six early literacy skills are based on the Public Library Association's Every
Child Ready to Read program.
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