Bob Books Early Readers Giveaway #1!

February 2nd, 2012

We are thrilled to announce the release of a new series of Bob Books: Bob Books Early Readers.

Bob Books Early Readers are 32-page Level 1 stories that contain short sentences, words that are simple to sound out, and no unusual spellings. Great for children who have mastered Bob Books Set 3, the Early Readers contain original Bob Books stories that are warm, friendly and wholesome. The New Puppy and Cupcake Surprise! are on sale now for just $3.99 each, but we’d like to get these brand-new books to you for free! We will be giving away both titles to one lucky winner each week, from now until February 17.

Here’s How to Enter:

One winner each week will receive both The New Puppy and Cupcake Surprise! Please leave a comment below and share with us one of your favorite earliest learning to read experiences (either yours or one you witnessed from a child).

Extra entries if you take our quick Bob Books survey!

Also – here are more ways you can connect with the magic of learning to read and with Bob Books:

Like Bob Books on Facebook

Follow @Bob_Books on Twitter

Sign up for the Bob Books e-mail newsletter

The fine print:

This giveaway is open to all legal residents of the United States ages 18 and over. Enter by submitting a comment below. One entry per person. E-mail addresses will not be publicized online and we will only contact if you win the giveaway. No purchase is necessary. The winner will be selected randomly via random.org from all valid entries. This Bob Books book giveaway ends on Friday, February 10 at 7 pm EST and we will announce the winner online shortly thereafter.

 

6 Learning to Read Resolutions

January 6th, 2012

Happy New Year! Here at Bob Books, we strive to make the learning to read process magical and enjoyable. Reading is one of the best lifelong gifts you can bestow upon a child, and we’re here to make the process fun and delightful.

So whether your goals are to focus on is kindergarten preparedness, to get a young one ready for preschool, or to work on some important early literacy and pre-reading skills this year, we have a few tips to get you off on the right direction.

1.  Read to your child every day. Who doesn’t love a great story? From babies to older kids, any time spent reading to a child is quality time. Research shows that even just 20 minutes per day can build early literacy skills, promote bonding, and increase listening and attention spans – all necessary skills for school and for life.

2.  Share your love of books by taking your children on a trip to a public library or bookstore, keeping books in your home and providing opportunities for your kids to see you enjoying reading – whether a daily newspaper, a magazine, the latest sci-fi thriller or an e-book download. Lead by example.

3. Make it a game. Reading and books are fun! Play around with language by coming up with on-the-spot games like “tell me everything you can think of that starts with the letter P…” sending the kids on a word treasure hunt around your house, tell a story using flash cards, have them stir up some alphabet soup, or sort shapes – all of these activities are easy (and basically free). The best part is that you’ll be helping them develop important pre-reading skills without your child even being aware of it.

4. Exercise patience. Refresh yourself on how to identify the signs of when your child is ready for reading, and introduce new concepts gently at your child’s pace. When your child first begins to take steps into reading, allow them the time to figure out concepts on their own and ask you for help. If your child is interested, pays attention, interacts with the book, and seems to have an idea of what you mean, then you are on your way to reading. If your child is wiggly, disruptive or gets frustrated easily, they may not be ready. Put the books away for a few months and try again later. Children learn at different rates. It is important to find your child’s rate, rather than your own, if you want your child to have a happy reading experience.

5. Praise often. There’s nothing more exciting than witnessing a child grasp reading concepts – when the words come alive on the page and the child makes the connection between letters and the sounds they make and then how letters form words that tell a story that they can read all by themselves! Offer plenty of praise for every milestone (big or small) and keep encouraging (not pushing) your child to gently progress to the next level. Here is a great video example showing some techniques you can use at home.

6. Keep going! We have some book recommendations for children who have “graduated” past Bob Books Set 5. For school-age children whose reading level has exceeded early readers and short chapter books, now is a great opportunity to talk to a teacher, librarian or bookstore owner and get even more recommendations. If your child is “stuck on a genre,” encourage them to go outside the genre and read in other topic areas that interest them. See if you can join a Mother-Daughter Book Club (or a Father-Son Book Club or any variation thereof) as it’s yet another great way to share the joys of reading as a family. If you don’t have one in your area, think about starting one!

What are your reading resolutions? Please share!

 

 

 

 

Best Gifts for Preschoolers & Emerging Readers

December 15th, 2011

Looking for a great gift idea for the little ones in your life? The gift of reading is one of the best gifts you can bestow upon a child; it’s one that will last a lifetime. Whether the kiddos (your children or someone else’s) are just beginning to understand the concept of learning to read, or are nearly ready to read books by themselves, there’s plenty to choose from. Here are some of our top picks.

Refrigerator Magnets

What kid doesn’t love to mess around with magnets? Alphabet magnets can provide hours of fun for your preschool-age child (ages 3+). Meanwhile, they’re learning valuable skills like learning their ABCs, identifying colors and recognizing shapes.

Transportation Magnetic Blocks

You may think that your toddler is just playing around, but exploring shapes and patterns is a very important pre-reading skill. These super fun magnetic blocks allow young kids to make a duck, a cow, a scarecrow, or a bus, an airplane, a rocket, and more.

Dr Seuss Learning Cards and Shapes

Seuss it up in 12 oversized double-sided flash cards with games, activities, and illustrations that work on important pre-reading skills like color recognition and naming, shape recognition, matching, comparing and contrasting and special recognition.

First Words Flash Cards

These cards come in a sturdy storage box containing 12 cards with rounded corners. Each card has a photograph with touch-and-feel textures on one side, and information for the parent and child on the other.

FirstWords iPhone/iPad Apps

Our partners at Learning Touch have over a dozen learning apps for toddlers and preschoolers to choose from – everything from FirstWords Animals to FirstWords Japanese. And for Bob Books fans, be sure to check out the Bob Books Reading Magic Apps.

Cranium Caribou Island

This award-winning board game is a treasure hunt game designed especially for young children, helping them learn basic number, letter, shape, and color recognition. Game rounds last about 10 to 15 minutes, great for young attention spans.

My First Bob Books

The My First Bob Books Sets (Alphabet and Pre-Reading Skills) introduce young children to pre-reading skills like identifying basic shapes, sorting, recognizing simple patterns, sequencing, learning the names of letters, and understanding that letters represent sounds. Each set contains parent guides with helpful tips on how to support new concepts and build a foundation for reading.

Bob Books Foundation Sets

Is your child ready for reading? If so, start with Bob Books Set 1 and gradually progress your emerging reader through sets 2, 3, 4 and 5 at their own pace. The Bob Books approach is gentle, and each level addresses a stage in a child’s reading development. This carefully crafted, simple, and progressive approach to learning assures children success and confidence from their very earliest reading experience.

What are your favorite gifts for emerging readers? Let us know.

 

 

 

 

Win a Bob Books Library!

December 3rd, 2011

**** Thank you for your participation! This giveaway has now ended ****

Congrats to winner  J L Thomas!

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Happy Holidays! As a way to celebrate the season, we thrilled to partner with Scholastic in giving away an entire Bob Books Library to one lucky winner!

The prize includes ALL Bob Books foundation sets, including Bob Books Set 1: Beginning ReadersBob Books Set 2: Advancing Beginners, Bob Books Set 3: Word Families, Bob Books Set 4: Complex Words and Bob Books Set 5: Long Vowels. Entering is easy. All you have to do is TAKE THE BOB BOOKS SURVEY and we’ll randomly select a winner next week. The giveaway ends on Monday, December 12 at 7pm EST.

ENTER NOW.

Additional ways to participate:

Like Bob Books on Facebook

Follow @Bob_Books on Twitter

Sign up for the Bob Books e-mail newsletter

The fine print:

This giveaway is open to all legal residents of the United States ages 18 and over. Enter by taking the Bob Books survey. One entry per person. E-mail addresses will not be publicized online and we will only contact if you win the giveaway. No purchase is necessary. The winner will be selected randomly via random.org from all valid entries. The Bob Books book giveaway ends on Monday, December 12 at 7 pm EST and we will announce the winner online shortly thereafter.

5 Terrific Charities that Support Early Literacy

November 22nd, 2011

Did you know that 34% of children who enter kindergarten lack the basic language skills they need in order to read? Early childhood education is critical. What better way to foster research-based early literacy initiatives than supporting a worthy charity? ‘Tis the season for giving, so we’ve rounded up a list of our favorite non-profits.

1.  Reach Out And Read: By partnering with doctors, nurse practitioners and other medical professionals, Reach Out and Read programs are incorporated into the well-child pediatric and family practitioner visits beginning at the 6-month checkup and continue through age 5, with a special emphasis on children growing up in low-income communities. Even better: families that are served by Reach Out and Read programs have been shown to read together more often, and their children enter kindergarten with larger vocabularies and stronger language skills.

2.  First Book: Did you know that the majority of low-income families do not have a single book for their children? First Book provides over 18,000 free and low priced books to needy families every day. In fact, First Book has distributed more than 85 million books and educational resources to programs and schools serving children from low-income families throughout the United States and Canada.

3.   United Through Reading. Supporting the read aloud experience for military families, United Through Reading offers deployed parents the opportunity to video-record themselves reading storybooks to their children, creating positive emotional connections within the family and easing the stress of family separations.

4.  Room to Read. “World change starts with educated children.” Working in developing countries in collaboration with local communities, Room to Read promotes gender equality in education and develops literacy skills and a habit of reading among primary school children.

5.  Children’s Literacy Initiative. Providing professional development, literacy services and children’s books in nine eastern states plus Washington, DC, the Children’s Literacy Initiative works to close the literacy achievement gap among disadvantaged children in Head Start programs and other early learning and classroom settings.

What are your favorite charitable organizations that support early learning and literacy initiatives?

Spider Web Sight Words Activity

October 26th, 2011

Sight words are common words that appear again and again in your children’s reading material. Knowing these words “by sight” is essential for reading fluency. Here is a fun way to engage your kids in the concept of sight words. Perfect for a rainy afternoon!

The following is a guest post via our friends at Toddler Approved. Enjoy!

Materials Needed: Paper plates, small pieces of paper, scissors, a marker, painter’s tape, clear tape, and Bob Books Sight Words: Kindergarten .

Directions:

1. Create a spider web on your floor using painter’s tape. You can make it as big or as small as you’d like.

2. Grab a few paper plates and your scissors and help your toddler start cutting into the paper plate to create spider legs. (Our spiders looked more like crabs than spiders, but oh well!)


3. Next, write three sight words from your Bob Books onto three pieces of scrap paper with your marker. (We only focused on three words at a time because we didn’t want my son to be overwhelmed. Older kids could definitely do more.)

4. Then, tape the scrap paper words to the tops of the spiders.

Now that you have your spider web and your “sight word” spiders, you are ready to drop the spiders onto different spots on the web and start the activity.

The activity can be done in a lot of ways. Here are two of the ways we tried it using our Bob Books:

Spider Web Read Along

Read the story aloud and stop reading anytime you get to a sight word. Have your child walk toward the correct “sight word” spider while balancing on the tape spider web (This was tough for my son!) Next, have your child pick up the “sight word” spider and read the word. Keep reading until you’ve worked your way through all of your sight words.

This method helped us work on listening and identifying sight words when we heard them, which is an important step when working on reading comprehension.

Words in Action

Walk around the tape spider web and try not to fall off (I did this with my son). Take turns picking a sight word to find and say the word aloud. For example, when my son said “can” I had to walk around the web, find the correctly labeled spider, pick it up and yell “I can!” with my arms in the air. (When I was in gymnastics as a little girl, we had to yell “I can!” when we completed a gymnastics move. He thought it was funny.) We came up with body actions for each sight word (jump= jumping up and down, on= we had to stand “on” the spider, can= yell “I can”). We also made up sentences while we walked around the web using our words. For example, when it was my turn and the word was “jump,” I said the sentence, “I like to jump on the trampoline.”

We worked on expanding our sentences and adding more detail. We also worked on correctly using the sight word in context. It was silly AND educational, so we had a lot of fun.

Do you have an activity or success story you’d like to share? We’d love to hear from you. Let us know.

 

 

Delightfully Interactive Halloween Books for Preschoolers

October 14th, 2011

Boo! Halloween is almost here and no doubt the kiddos are getting excited. What better way to share the fun of the season than with a great book or two… or five! Here are our favorites for preschoolers (and kids of all ages), from sing-along silliness to scratch and sniff smelliness.

The Spooky Wheels on the Bus by J. Elizabeth Mills

This humorous sing-along (to the tune of “The Wheels on the Bus”) is sure to be a hit in your house, especially when your kids start making up new verses.

 

 

Boo Who? A Fold Out Halloween Adventure by Lola Schaefer

Kids will have fun with the riddles and unfolding the pages for a giant surprise!

 

I’m Looking for a Monster by Timothy Young

A clever novelty pop-up book full of adventure, silliness– and lots and lots of monsters!

 

Snappy Sounds Boo by Beth Harwood

Eek, what was that sound? This book makes a lot of them, from a ghost train to owls hooting to creepy organ music. Each page plays different sounds. Scary and fun!

 

The Spooky Smells of Halloween by Mary Man-Kong

Read and smell! Apples and cookies (mmmm…); skunk (ewwww).

Halloween Scratch and Sniff by Elizabeth Spurr

Another fun scratch and sniff book. This time with the delicious scents of candy corn, licorice, lollipops and pumpkin pie.

Do you have any Halloween favorites that you’d like to share! Let us know.

Diary of an Emerging Reader: Refusing to Read

October 6th, 2011

When I first started chronicling my then two and a half year-old son Wilson’s learning to read adventures back in 2009, I thought for sure he’d be reading in a few years.

It’s been a few years. He isn’t reading yet.

But we’ve gone through some pretty important early literacy stages. First there were the unexpected adventures we experienced when we started with one learning activity and ending up on another, the developmental milestones of alphabet recognition and the delightful word explosion, and then the fun and antics that can happen when you involve an older sibling in the process. We’ve had a few battles and power struggles over the types of books that are being read (trucks, anyone?) so we took a slower approach, as a result, working on skills like pattern recognition and matching. We turned some of the concepts into simple activities and games.

So here’s where we are now. Wilson still loves books. He’s attending a Pre-K program five days a week and loves school. He knows his shapes. He knows the alphabet. He can point to signs like “STOP and “No” and tell me what they say. Every night he asks us to read his Bob Books to him. We have all the foundation sets at home as our older daughter Elizabeth (now 8 ) successfully learned to read using the series between the ages of 4 and 5 with few setbacks or hurtles. She’s a fantastic reader and takes a book with her wherever she goes; that’s how much she loves to read. Wilson? He just wants to be read to. I know he understands that the letters on the page form words and that certain letters form different sounds. He can spell his name. He passes the Bob Books “How to Tell if Your Child Ready to Read” checklist! But still, he refuses to read.

I know it sounds really obvious, but one of the biggest realizations for me as a parent is that my two children are not alike. They learn differently. They have different personalities. Different interests. Different willpower. The process of learning to read and the journey I’m sharing with Wilson is not at all like the one I experienced with Elizabeth. And that’s okay.

Every day we’re getting closer. I’m learning to be patient and to enjoy the process however and whenever it comes. It’s difficult for me to reconcile my eagerness in wanting to push him to read (because I honestly think he can) with letting go and letting it happen on his own terms. It’s hard. The one thing I keep coming back to is this: I love to read. Elizabeth loves to read. My husband loves to read. Our whole family shares a love for books. Wilson, in his own time, will learn to read and will love reading too. It’s one of the best gifts I think I can ever bestow upon a child. So why would I try to ruin it for him by forcing this milestone? That’s what I love about Bob Books. It’s a gentle, simple approach. There isn’t anything that needs to be forced or hurried and I know that Wilson appreciates the books just as they are.

Reading will happen for Wilson, perhaps sooner than I think. I’m looking forward to the day when he has that magical ah-ha moment, when everything clicks and comes together. My video camera is ready.

- Allison

 

Bob Books Sight Words Giveaway!

September 26th, 2011

***THIS GIVEAWAY HAS NOW ENDED***

Congratulations to K. Balman, winner of Bob Books Sight Words: Kindergarten and Bob Books Sight Words: First Grade!

Thanks to everyone who participated. Check back soon for upcoming promotions and events.

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It’s week two of our Scholastic back to school promotion!

Sight words are common words that appear again and again in your children’s reading material. Knowing these words “by sight” is essential for reading fluency. We want your kids to ace their sight words so we’re giving away two sets of Bob Books Sight Words to one lucky winner! Bob Books Sight Words: Kindergarten and Bob Books Sight Words: First Grade. Entering is easy. All you have to do is leave a comment below telling us why you think your child is ready for Bob Books Sight Words or take our quick and fun Bob Books survey and we’ll randomly select a winner at the end of the week.

More ways you can participate with Bob Books:

Like Bob Books on Facebook

Follow @Bob_Books on Twitter

Sign up for the Bob Books e-mail newsletter

The fine print:

This giveaway is open to all legal residents of the United States ages 18 and over. Enter by submitting a comment below or by taking the Bob Books survey. One entry per person. E-mail addresses will not be publicized online and we will only contact if you win the giveaway. No purchase is necessary. The winner will be selected randomly via random.org from all valid entries. The Bob Books book giveaway ends on Friday, September 30 at 7 pm EST and we will announce the winner online shortly thereafter.

 

Bob Books Sets 1 & 2 Giveaway!

September 19th, 2011

**THIS GIVEWAY IS NOW ENDED**

Congratuations to Natalie H., the winner of Bob Books Sets 1 & 2!

Stay tuned as we have another giveaway coming up next week.

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Is your child ready to read? We are excited to partner with Scholastic in this back to school promotion to raise early literacy awareness and get your kids reading! We’re giving away two of our most popular Bob Books sets: Bob Books Set 1: Beginning Readers and Bob Books Set 2: Advancing Beginners to one lucky winner. Entering is easy. All you have to do is leave a comment below telling us why you think your child is ready for reading and we’ll randomly select a winner at the end of the week.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

More ways you can participate with Bob Books!

Like Bob Books on Facebook

Follow @Bob_Books on Twitter

Sign up for the Bob Books e-mail newsletter

Take the Bob Books survey

 

The fine print:

This giveaway is open to all legal residents of the United States ages 18 and over. Enter by submitting a comment below. One entry per person. E-mail addresses will not be publicized online and we will only contact if you win the giveaway. No purchase is necessary. The winner will be selected randomly via random.org from all valid entries. The Bob Books book giveaway ends on Friday, September 23 at 7 pm EST and we will announce the winner online shortly thereafter.