Archive for June, 2010

Diary of an Emerging Reader: Fun & Games

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

One of the things I like best about the Bob Books is how they progress sequentially, introducing different concepts in handy, easy-to-hold books. Lately I’ve been using the My First Bob Books: Pre-Reading Skills with Wilson, our emerging reader. Because he knows his shapes pretty well, we’re now breezing through the first three books (which cover learning simple shapes, finding hidden shapes and matching shapes) and are spending more time on the other three groups (sorting, patterns and sequencing). We’re having fun with each book beyond the text, asking questions, finding hidden objects and playing games.
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My First Bob Books are not only intended for you to read to your child (whereas the foundation sets are intended for your child to read to you) but they are full of fun learning games that you can play with your emerging reader. For example, in “Fix It” (book 5) kids are asked to identify certain shapes that will enable the broken toys to get fixed. The illustrations contain additional shapes (triangles on the curtain, a smiley face on the flag), which I asked Wilson to identify and count. In “Get Ready” (book 10) the illustrations are spaced on the page as to give kids clues to what happens next. I turned it into a game by asking Wilson which toys he would play with first, second and last. Wilson loves blocks so we had a lot of fun with “Block Town” (book 7), which introduces simple patterns. I had him repeat all of the shapes in the pattern (“square, rectangle, rectangle, square”) and then we got down on the floor and created our own pattern – using the Bob Books!

My emerging reader has an extremely short attention span so our reading sessions progress at their own pace. Once he gets wiggly or starts throwing books on the floor, it’s time to move onto something else. Still, I can definitely tell that each time we pick up the books, he’s putting into action the concepts that we learned in previous reading sessions. Which is pretty exciting.
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Do you have a reading success story or guest blog you’d like to share? Let us know.

Guest Blog: Teaching Reading with Bob Books

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

In 1991, I began a little business tutoring children in reading. I used a popular (at the time) phonics program and it was slow going. These poor little guys and gals seriously believed they hated to read. As a bibliophile myself, nothing seemed sadder to me than thinking that one hated books, the primary source of knowledge in our culture.

At that time, I had never heard of Bob Books or anything like it. We trudged along with phonics lessons on flashcards and in songs, and I did my best to wrap up each lesson with a story in a picture book that children could love. I was convinced even then that love was the foundation of true learning.

How I wish I had had Bob Books back then! I firmly believe my students would have thrived on them the way my own children do now.

Children, once they gain a bit of knowledge, like to flex their new mental muscles. Bob Books are the perfect outlet. Children learn just a handful of sounds–a, m, o, s, and t–and suddenly they can read a whole book! I see their little chests puff out with triumph; they are so happy to read a real book, all by themselves.

Just this past weekend, my five-year-old (who is my current reading student), got out her Set 1 books (she is working on Set 2 these days). She read through each book with a smile on her face, because she could read them all. I think we often underestimate the power of that feeling of victory, that moment when we have grasped a new concept and hold it fast with satisfaction and joy, turning it over in our minds. This is what Bob Books offer to little ones.

Oh, sure, they outgrow them in time. But I can say from experience that even an 8-year-old can remember them fondly. “My first books!” he says…and he smiles.

- Brandy Vencel is a mother of 4 and is blogging at Teaching with Bob Books.

There’s More to Reading Than Meets the Eye

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Most of us have been reading for so long that it has become automatic to us. As we look at a magazine or newspaper, we do not have to sound out the words or ponder their pronunciation or meaning. Words flow in an unbroken stream, from the printed page to our brains. Our eyes are windows into a world of magic, adventure, facts and stories as we read reams of information. Libraries, the Internet, newspapers, magazines and books open to us a world almost beyond imagination.

It is only when you begin teaching a youngster to read that you realize what a complicated process this actually is.

There are many skills that you absorbed as a kid that prepared you for your first step into reading. You may remember, or you may have experienced with your own children, many different reading preparation games:

- beginning sounds games
- rhyming games
- matching games
- sorting
- shapes
- listening to and telling stories

One of the most important skills is called phonemic awareness.

Phonemic awareness is the ability of the ear (and brain) to separate a word into its individual sounds. You’d be surprised what a challenge it can be to learn the individual letters in a word if you do not have good phonemic awareness.

To illustrate the number of skills needed before you read your first word, here is a breakdown of the cognitive development process:

- You can see the black squiggles on a page
- You understand that those black squiggles on a page represent sounds (the same ah-ha type moment Helen Keller had with her teacher Anne Sullivan)
- You know the sound the letter makes
- you can individuate the sounds in a word that you hear
- you can read the letters in order
- you can understand the sounds they represent
- you can remember them long enough to sound out an entire word
- you can blend individual sounds into a word
- you understand what the words means
- you can remember the word long enough to read all the words are in a sentence
- Eventually, you can read and remember several sentences and paragraphs and understand the meaning in a story.

Our ease of reading can be taken for granted if we don’t understand the skills we’ve mastered when we were just beginning. As we guide our children through learning to read, it helps that we understand the process. We can do this by supporting them through all the steps and helping them identify, hear and understand sounds in sequence. This is our gift to our children as they embark on the adventure of learning to read.