Reading
Tips For Parents
How Can I Improve My Child's Reading?
Parents are more concerned
about their child's progress in reading than in any other subject
taught in school, and rightfully
so. In order for students to achieve in math, science, English,
history, geography, and other
subjects, reading skills must be developed to the point that most of
them are automatic. Students
cannot struggle with word recognition when they should be reading
quickly for comprehension
of a text.
Since reading is so important
to success in school, parents can and should play a role in helping
their children to become interested
in reading and in encouraging their growth in reading skills. At
the same time, parents and
teachers need to work together. Many teachers are now sending
home practical ideas for parents
to use with their preschoolers. As a result, young children are
developing some of the skills
at home that will later help them in school.
What Can Parents Do To Help their Preschoolers in the Learning-To- Read Process?
Research shows that children
learn about reading before they enter school. In fact, they learn in
the best manner-through observation.
Young children, for example, see people around them
reading newspapers, books,
maps, and signs. Parents can do a lot to foster an understanding of
print by talking with their
preschoolers about signs in their environment and by letting their
children know they enjoy reading
themselves.
As I Read to My Preschooler, What Should I Do Specifically?
Many parents recognize the
value and enjoyment of reading to their young children, but perhaps
they are not clear about the
specific skills that could be enhanced through the process. Most
important, reading should
be an enjoyable experience. Research reveals that when young
children experience warm and
close contacts with their parents when they are being read to, they
develop more positive attitudes
toward reading.
Run your index finger under
the line of print. This procedure is simple and helps children begin to
notice words and that words
have meaning. They also gain an awareness of the conventions of
reading (e.g., one reads from
left to right and from the top of the page to the bottom; sentences
are made up of words; and
some sentences extend beyond a single line of print).
One of the greatest advantages
of reading to preschoolers (or children of any age) is the
opportunity for vocabulary
development. Children learn the meaning of words through good
literature; words take on
rich meaning when used in an interesting story.
What Can I Do for My School-Age Child Who Doesn't Like To Read?
In the early elementary years,
from first through third grades, children continue learning how to
read. It is a complex process,
difficult for some and easy for others. Care must be taken during
these early years not to overemphasize
the learning-to-read process. Reading for pleasure and
information develops reading
interests and offers children the opportunity to practice their
reading skills in meaningful
ways. Parents of elementary age children should provide reading
materials in the home that
arouse curiosity or extend their child's natural interest in the world
around them.
By encouraging and modeling
leisure-time reading in the home, parents take the most important
step in fostering their child's
reading development.
How Can Reading Research Information Be Useful to Me, As a Parent?
Current research in reading reveals three important considerations for parents and teachers:
The following suggestions have been beneficial to many parents:
Where Can I Find More
Information About Increasing My Child's Interest in Reading?
Contact your local library.
Most libraries have summer book clubs and special reading activities
for children.
Many organizations will provide
free information to parents who'd like additional ideas. Send a
stamped, self-addressed envelope
to any of the following groups:
International Reading Association
800 Barksdale Road
Newark, DE 19711
ERIC Clearinghouse on Elementary and Early Childhood Education
University of Illinois
College of Education
805 W. Pennsylvania Avenue
Urbana, IL 61801-4897
http://ericps.ed.uiuc.edu/ericeece.html
American Library Association
50 East Huron Street
Chicago, IL 60611
Sources
Most of the following references-those
identified with an ED or EJ number-have been abstracted
and are in the ERIC database.
The journal articles should be available at most research libraries.
For a list of ERIC collections
in your area, contact ACCESS ERIC at 1-800-LET- ERIC.
Loveday, E. and Simmons, K.
(1988). "Reading At Home: Does It Matter What Parents Do?"
Reading, 22 (2), 84-88. EJ
376 103.
Moore, S. A. and Moore, D.W.
(1990). "Emergent Literacy: Children, Parents, and Teachers
Together (Professional Resources)."
Reading Teacher, 43 (4), 330-31. EJ 403 669.
Resh, C.A. and Wilson, M.J.
(1990). "The Teacher-Parent Partnership: Helping Children
Become Good Readers." Reading
Horizons, 30 (2), 51-56. EJ 402 262.
Scott, J.A., et al. (1988).
From Present to Future: Beyond "Becoming a Nation of
Readers." Urbana, IL: University
of Illinois Center for the Study of Reading. ED 302 823.
Teale, W.H. and Martinez, M.G.
(1988). "Getting on the Right Road to Reading: Bringing
Books and Young Children Together
in the Classroom." Young Children, 44 (1), 10-15. EJ
380 635.
For more information on this subject, contact:
ERIC Clearinghouse on Reading and Communication Skills
Indiana University, Smith Research Center
2805 East 10th Street, Suite 150
Bloomington, IN 47408-2698
(812) 855-5847
(800) 759-4723
http://www.indiana.edu/~eric_rec/
Written by Beverly B. Swanson, Director, ACCESS ERIC.
This publication was prepared
by ACCESS ERIC with funding from the Office of Educational
Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of
Education, under contract No. RI890120. The opinions
expressed in this report do not necessarily reflect
the positions or policies of the Department of Education.
TITLE: How Can I Improve My
Child's Reading?
AUTHOR: Beverly B. Swanson
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