Heartland AEA 11

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Heartland AEA 11
6500 Corporate Drive
Johnston, IA 50131
515/270-9030
800/362-2720
Reading & Language Arts

Resources for Parents -
Assist Their Children With Reading

Here are a few helpful Web sites for parents who wish to work with their children to improve reading skills.

Help My Child Read - Reading Resources
U.S. Department of Education
http://www.ed.gov/parents/read/resources/edpicks.jhtml

Put Reading First-Helping Your Child Learn to Read
National Institute for Literacy
http://www.nifl.gov/partnershipforreading/
publications/reading_first2.html


Parent Resources
Reading is Fundamental
http://www.rif.org/parents/

Teach a Child to Read
Succeed to Read
http://www.succeedtoread.com/

Strategies to Teach Your Child to Read
Marcia's Lesson Links
www.marcias-lesson-links.com/full%20pamphlet.pdf

Helping Your Child Learn to Read - A Parent's Guide
Ontario Ministry of Education
http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/document/brochure/
earlyreading/index.html


Reading Rockets
PBS
http://www.readingrockets.org/

Reading and Your Child
University of Michigan Health Systems
http://www.med.umich.edu/1Libr/yourchild/reading.htm

How to Read With Your Child
GreatSchools
http://www.greatschools.net/cgi-bin/showarticle/CA/44

How to Help Your Child Read
Parenting for Latinos-SaberHacer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Z8URPoSojw

8 Simple Tips to Help Your Child Read
Mom Advice
http://www.momadvice.com/parenting/helping_your_child_read.aspx

How to Help Your Child with Learning Disabilities Learn to Read
Children's Disabilities Information
http://www.childrensdisabilities.info/learning_disabilities/
teach-child-read-learning-disabilities.html

FreeReading Intervention Program
FreeReading
http://free-reading.net/index.php?title=Main_Page

National Center for Family Literacy
http://www.famlit.org/site/c.gtJWJdMQIsE/b.1204561/
k.BD7C/Home.htm

Reading Tips for Parents
Family Education Network
http://school.familyeducation.com/reading/
parents-and-school/33582.html

Tips:

  • Give books and magazine subscriptions as gifts. Set your TV to show closed captioning. Your child will naturally read while watching!
  • Model reading - talk with your child about what you read.
  • Have a variety of reading materials around: books, magazines, newspapers. Keep them available in the house and car.
  • Set aside special time to read with your child.
  • Encourage a wide variety of reading activities.
 Make reading an integral part of your children's lives. Have them read menus, roadside signs, game directions, weather reports, movie time listings, and other practical everyday information.
  • Develop the library habit. Entice your children to read more by taking them to the library every few weeks to get new reading materials. The library also offers reading programs for children of all ages that may appeal to your children and further increase their interest in reading.
  • Show enthusiasm for your children's reading. 
Your reaction has a great influence on how hard they will try to become good readers. Be sure to give them genuine praise for their efforts.

Early Readers

  • Invite a child to read with you every day.
  • When reading a book where the print is large, point word by word as you read. This will help the child learn that reading goes from left to right and understand that the word he or she says is the word he or she sees.
  • Read a child's favorite book over and over again.
  • Read many stories with rhyming words and lines that repeat. Invite the child to join in on these parts. Point, word by word, as he or she reads along with you.
  • Discuss new words. For example, "This big house is called a palace. Who do you think lives in a palace?"
  • Stop and ask about the pictures and about what is happening in the story.
  • Read from a variety of children's books, including fairy tales, songbooks, poems, and information books.

Middle Grades

  • Ask about your child's interests. Let them have choice in what they will read. Fiction and non-fiction books, magazines, comic books and newspapers are all good choices.
  • Take turns reading with your child. Talk with your child about what they are reading.
  • Encourage your child to use the Internet to learn more about topics of interest.
  • Make reading fun - a time that you both look forward to spending together.

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