Parent
Involvement: What Skills Need to be Part of a Daily Routine?
Parent
involvement in early literacy is directly connected to academic achievement.
Children need parents to be their reading role models with daily practice in
order to navigate successfully through beginning literacy skills. According to
research, parents should focus on the words on the page while reading with
their preK reader (Evans, Shaw, Bell, 2000).
Here
are some strategies for beginning and seasoned readers' literacy success:
•
Point to each word on the page as you read. This beginning
literacy strategy will assist children with making print/story/illustration
connections. This skill also helps build a child's tracking skills from one
line of text to the next one.
•
Read the title and ask your child to make a prediction. Beginning and seasoned
readers alike need to make predictions before reading a story. This will go a
long way to ensure that a child incorporates previewing and prediction in his
or her own reading practices both now and in the future.
•
Take "picture walks." Help your child use
the picture clues in most early readers and picture books to tell the story
before reading.
•
Model fluency while reading, and bring your own energy and
excitement for reading to your child. Both new and seasoned readers struggle with
varying pitch, intonation and proper fluctuations when they read aloud. Older
readers will benefit from shared reading (taking turns).
•
Ask your child questions after reading every book. Reading comprehension
is the reason we read -- to understand. The new CCORE
standards
assessing U.S. children's readiness for the workplace and college ask children
at all grade levels to compare and contrast their understanding of concepts.
This takes practice. Help your child explain his or her understanding of any
given story in comparison to another. Have your child share a personal
experience similar to a problem or theme within a story. Higher-order thinking
skills (critical thinking) are skills children are expected to use in both
written and oral assessments in school. There is no way for a teacher to ask
every child to use a critical thinking skill every day. Parents can.
•
Connect reading and writing if possible. The connection between
reading, writing and discussion should be incorporated with daily literacy
practice. Have a young child dictate to a parent who writes in a journal or on
a sheet of paper. Modeling the formation of sentences aligned with the words of
a story is crucial for a child to begin making a neural interconnectedness
between reading and writing. A child's process of drawing pictures brings his
or her personal creativity toward the story. Sharing these illustrations of
experiences and individual interpretations related to the sentence he or she
has created on the page is yet another step toward this early balanced literacy
approach.
Beginning
and lifelong literacy is transformative and constantly growing. However, the
process must begin when initially learning to read, and must be as intuitive to
a child as when he or she learned to speak. This can happen through
incorporating repetition, proper skills and modeling.
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