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A Reading Checklist: Birth Through Age Six
There are many ways to encourage your child
to become involved in reading. Here are some
questions to ask yourself to help stay on track:
For Babies (Six Weeks to One Year)
Do I provide a comfortable place
for our story time? Is my child happy to be
here?
Am I showing her the pictures
in the book? Am I changing the tone of my voice
as I read to show emotion and excitement?
Am I paying attention to how my
child responds? What does she especially like?
Is she tired and ready to stop?
For Toddlers (One to Three Years)
All of the questions above, plus:
Does my child enjoy the book we
are reading?
Do I encourage her to "pretend
read," joining in where she has memorized
a word or phrase?
When I ask questions, am I giving
my child enough time to think and answer?
Do I tie ideas in the book to
things familiar to my child? Do I notice if
she does this on her own?
Do I let my child know how much
I like her ideas and encourage her to tell me
more?
Do I point out letters, such as
the first letter of her name?
Remember: Children learn step-by-step
in a process that takes time and patience. They
vary a great deal in the rate they make progress
and in what holds their interest.
For Preschoolers (Three and Four
years)
All of the questions above, plus:
Do I find ways to help my child
begin to identify letters and make the letter-sound
matches?
For Kindergartners (Five Years)
All of the questions above, plus:
Do I find ways to help my child
begin to identify some printed words?
Do I let my child retell favorite
stories to show she knows how the story goes
and what's in it?
For Beginning First-Graders (Six
Years)
All of the questions above, plus:
Do I give my child the chance
to read a story to me using the text, picture
clues, her memory -- or any combination of these
ways that help her make sense of the story?
Source: Helping Your Child
Become a Reader, U.S. Department of Education
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