Vocabulary
• Talk with your child about what is going on
around you. Talk about feelings — yours and your
child’s.
• When your child talks with you, add more detail
to what she says.
• Speak in the language that is most comfortable
for you.
• Read together every day.When you talk about
the story and pictures, your child hears and learns
more words.
• Research shows that children who have larger vocabularies are better readers. Knowing many words helps children recognize written words and understand what they read.
Print Motivation
• Make book-sharing time a special time for closeness
between you and your child.
• Let your child see you reading.
• Visit your public library often.
• Children who enjoy books will want to learn how to read.
Print Awareness
• Read aloud everyday print — labels, signs,
lists, menus. Print is everywhere!
• Point to some of the words as you say them,
especially words that are repeated.
• Let your child turn the pages.
• Let your child hold the book and read or tell
the story.
• Hold the book upside down. See if your child
turns the book around.
• Being familiar with printed language helps children feel comfortable with books and understand that print is useful.
Narrative Skills
• Tell your child stories.
• Ask your child to tell you about something that
happened today.
• Read books together. Stories help children understand
that things happen in order first, next, last.
• Read a book that you have read before. Switch
what you do — you be the listener and let your
child tell you the story.
• Being able to tell or retell a story helps children understand what they read.
Phonological Awareness
• Say nursery rhymes and make up your own silly,
nonsense rhymes.
• Sing songs. Songs have different notes for each
syllable in a word, so children can hear the different
sounds in words.
• Play word games such as, “What sounds
like ‘ran’?” or “What starts
with the same sound as ‘ball’?”
• Say rhymes and sing songs in the language that
is most comfortable for you.
• Being able to hear the sounds that make up words helps children sound out words as they begin to read.
Letter Knowledge
• Help your child see different shapes and the
shapes of letters.
• Talk about what is the same and what is different
between two things.
• Write your child’s name, especially the
first letter.
• Make letters from clay or use magnetic letters.
• Point out and name letters when reading alphabet
books, signs or labels.
• Read alphabet books with clear letters and pictures.
• Knowing the names and sounds of letters helps children figure out how to sound out words.
How you read to children makes a difference in how ready they are to learn to read.
Use “Hear and Say” reading to teach
new words.
• Choose a book that your child already knows
well.
• Ask “what” questions. (“What’s
this?” and point to a picture.)
• Follow your child’s answers with another
question. (“What is the dog doing?” Child:“Digging.”)
• Repeat what your child says and expand on it.
(“I think you’re right. The dog is digging
under the fence to go find his friend.”)
• Help your child as needed. Praise and encourage
your child.
• Follow your child’s interests.
Use “Hear and Say” reading to develop
comprehension skills.
• “Hear and Say” reading encourages
your two- and three-year-old to think and talk by answering
open-ended questions.
• Ask questions like: “What’s going
on here? ”Tell me what you see on this page.”
• Follow your child’s answer with another
question: “What else do you see?” “What
is happening over here?”
• Expand what your child says. Add another piece
of information.
• Help your child repeat your longer phrases.
Have Fun!
“Vocabulary is learned from books more than from
normal conversation with adults or children or from
television exposure.”
From Meaningful Differences in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children — B. Hart and T.R. Risley.
“The single most important activity
for building the knowledge required for eventual
success in reading is reading aloud to children.
This is especially so during the preschool years.”
From Becoming a Nation of Readers
The Early Literacy
Initiative
A partnership among the Public Library Association,
the Association for Library Service to Children
and the National Institute of Child Health &
Human Development
This information created by Dr. Grover (Russ)
Whitehurst, Leading Professor of Psychology, State
University of New York and Dr. Christopher Lonigan,
Associate Professor of Psychology, Florida State
University.
Funding provided by
the Public Library Association (PLA) and the Association
for Library Service to Children (ALSC), divisions
of the American Library Association. Spring 2001
© copyright 2004 -- PLA/ALSC, divisions of
the American Library Association
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