Archive for January, 2010

Bob Books in the Blogosphere

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

Before viral marketing, before Twitter and Facebook and YouTube and blogging, there was word of mouth. Parents and teachers simply told each other about the successes they were experiencing with learning to read and with Bob Books.molly1

Over the years we have received hundreds if not thousands of fan letters and e-mails and testimonials and your great ideas. The blogosphere and social media contain even more. The anecdotes, stories and personal accounts of your reading successes are terrifically authentic and wonderful. Here are some of our favorites. We can’t thank you enough!

YouTube video: Max Reads to Ava

The Mommy-Files Bob Books Review and Giveaway

Advanced Toddlers and Preschoolers iVillage Discussion

Gifted Issues Blog Discussion

Oregon Live Blog Review

Yahoo Answers Bob Books Discussion

Montessori Free Fall Blog: Another day, another Bob Book mastered

About.com Preschoolers Bob Books Discussion

Hub Pages Bob Books Discussion

Home School Reviews Bob Books

Have a great success story you’d like to share? Let us know!

Diary of an Emerging Reader: Independence

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Mine! No! I need it! I DO IT BY MYSELF!” Someone in my house has control issues.

Wilson, our two and a half year-old reader in training, is going through a new “phase.” Call it the terrible twos. Call it testing the limits. Call it newfound independence. Today his preschool teacher took me aside and said –after she informed me that he was acting out— “maybe he’s on the verge of some great milestone.” Let’s hope so.

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We use to enjoy story time with complete pleasure and ease. Now we have battles. One minute he’s happy being read to, the next he wants to read to himself. Last night we couldn’t agree whether Sally, one of the My First Bob Books Pre Reading Skills characters, was a circle or a ball. I decided it wasn’t that important in the grand scheme of things and let it roll off, so to speak.

I know that as the saying goes, this too shall pass. What’s most important right now is sharing a love of books and reading, whatever shape that takes. Wilson can enjoy books at his own pace. If he wants me to read, that’s great. If he takes the lead, that’s fine too. We can also turn it into a game, pointing out colors and shapes and letters of the alphabet for as long as attention spans allow. I have enough battles with my little person already; story time and learning to read is not going to be one of them.

Got a reading tip or early learning experience you’d like to share? Let us know.

–Allison