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This article
was written by Megan Goss, a reading consultant here at Let's Go
Learn, Inc. She lives with her husband and two children in
Sonoma County, California. She chooses books for her children to
read and advises her friends and neighbors on the same. We think
this is subject is frequently on the mind of parents of new
readers. Take this advice to the bookstore. Enjoy!
AmyPedigo
Director of Education
Let's Go Learn, Inc.
Choosing Books for Your Child
For the parents of a beginning
reader, choosing appropriate books to support reading endeavours
is often confusing and intimidating. Parents want the books they
choose to be challenging enough to teach something about
reading, yet comfortable enough to build confidence in reading
for the child. Some guidelines and advice may demystify this
process.
One basic concept to be aware of
with the earliest reading books is that they almost always fall
into two basic catagories: predictable texts, and those guided
by some phonetic rule they are trying to teach. These two kinds
of readers serve different purposes, and can be used most
effectively when those purposes are known. Both can be valuable
and should be used for young readers.
Predictable textbooks are used to
teach children strategies about reading. These texts will have
the same basic line repeated throughout the book, with a one or
two word difference on each page. For instance, page 1 may say,
"I like fruit." Page 2 would then say, "I like
flowers." Each page following these would have the same
format, beginning with "I like ________." On every
page you would find an illustration matching the sentence (a
picture of some fruit on page 1, some flowers on page 2, etc.).
These illustrations are crucial to this type of book, since they
help the early reader figure out the unknown word. The pattern
in these books is soon apparent to the young reader, and this is
comforting; they know that they can read the "I like"
parts on each page, and must only figure out the new, final word
in each sentence. Predictable textbooks teach children to use
the clues given to them by the surrounding text and by the
illustrations in order to figure out the word(s) they don't
know.
Some would argue that this isn't
really reading, since the child often memorizes the pattern
quickly, and sometimes doesn't even look at the words and 'read'
them once they are familiar. This isn't a fair assessment of
what these books are meant to do, however. Predictable texts are
wonderful confidence boosters for the earliest readers. These
beginners need all the clues and help they can get, and they
feel powerful when they find the pattern and begin to feel they
can actually read an entire book. They still must figure out the
unknown word(s), using whatever cues they can (illustrations,
beginning letter sounds, etc.). The confidence they feel when
they can define themselves as actual book readers is something
powerful, and leads them to want to try more and more.
The second category of beginning
reader text concerns books that focus on specific letter
patterns. These are also thought of as phonics-based readers.
For example, a book that is trying to teach the short sound for
the vowel 'o' would be replete with words with short 'o' in the
text: "Bob got the mop," for example. Because these
types of books focus on a particular aspect of reading, it is
easy for a parent or teacher to follow up with lessons that
reinforce what the book is trying to teach. Isolating a
particular sound (short 'o' for example) helps the student focus
on this sound, and, hopefully, remember it enough to transfer
this knowledge to other reading contexts.
Some final reminders: Both of
these types of books are useful for early readers, and should be
utilized. Predictable texts are often useful as the very first
books for young children to try to tackle. Matching the
phonics-based books with what you would like to teach helps make
these books more relevant to your child. As you can see, these
early texts do not deal much with comprehension, so it is
important to read good literature to your children, and to ask
them comprehension questions as you go, in order to supplement
this kind of reading. As your child grows as a reader the texts
can become more complex, and comprehension becomes more
relevant.
Megan Goss, 2001
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