HAIS

Reading With Your Child at Home

Many parents read to their young children at bedtime, and this is often a special time of great pleasure. However, when it comes to your child learning to read and reading to you at home, it can be a different story. Children need structured instruction that suits their stage of development Some children learn to read without trying and just pick it up, but this is rare. Most children need structured instruction that suits their stage of development. Parents are often taken by surprise when their child is reluctant to read at home or struggles to remember words from one page to the next. What should be a pleasurable time of sharing a book then becomes a source of stress and anxiety for both parent and child. Here are a few tips to help make reading at home fun!Firstly, it is fine to read the story to your child first and then let them take their turn reading afterwards. This models good reading and gives them an idea of what the story is about before they start. Taking turns reading a page each can also take the pressure off. You can always read the book twice if you want your child to try every page! If your child is stuck on a word, tell them what it is to keep the flow going. Make a note of it and practise it at another time, using magnetic letters or flashcards.

Stories

See more stories