Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons


Book Description

A step-by-step program that shows parents, simply and clearly, how to teach their child to read in just 20 minutes a day.




Sound Steps to Reading (Storybook) Sound-Targeting Storybook & Sound Steps to Reading (Handbook) Parent/Teacher


Book Description

The Sound Steps to Reading Storybook contains the full text of the story fragment that begins each lesson. These stories should be read by the parent or teacher later on the same day after the lesson has been completed. Each story features the target sound (phoneme) for that lesson. The stories are humorous and written in rhyme. Trials in the U.S. and the U.K showed that children love them. Many children can begin reading these stories on their own (with a little help) about midway through the program. This is highly motivating. By the end of the program all children can read these stories with ease. The stories will work well with any synthetic phonics program that teaches the spelling alternatives for the sounds in English. Sound Steps to Reading is based on the author’s analysis of the English writing system, one of the most complex writing systems in the world. Mastering this complexity is solved by careful sequencing of the lessons so the child is never confronted with something he cannot do. Every lesson is scripted and no training is necessary to use this program. Lessons contain the same activities in the same order: 1) listening for the target sound in a story 2) a structured listening exercise 3) handwriting training and practice 4) segmenting and blending sounds in real words (reading) 5) copying words 6) spelling dictation 7) reading stories written with words/spellings taught so far. Lessons are cumulative. Each lesson builds on the previous lesson and only contains words with the sounds and spellings the child has been taught. When lessons proceed at the recommended pace of 3 lessons per week, most children become excellent readers, writers, and spellers in about 20-25 weeks. For classroom teachers, lessons will take about one school year. It is advised that the later lessons (last set) be reviewed at the start of first grade. Research results. A study on two kindergarten classrooms was carried out at the Willows School In Los Angeles. Most children could not read at the start of school. When they were tested at the end of the year, 42% scored in the top 1% in the nation, and 75% scored in the top 10%, based on test norms. All but one child scored well above “average.” There are two components to this program. The complete program must include both books. • The Sound Steps to Reading Handbook contains all lessons, all exercises and worksheets. • The Sound Steps to Reading Storybook contains the full text of the story fragment that begins each lesson.




Sound Steps to Reading


Book Description

The student workbook provides exercises and a special dictionary to teach how syllables are compounded in multisyllable words, as well as the spelling patterns used in a variety of prefixes and suffixes. Over three thousand multisyllable words are included in the lessons.




Early Reading Instruction


Book Description

Early Reading Instruction is a comprehensive analysis of the research evidence from early writing systems to computer models of reading. In this book, Diane McGuinness provides an innovative solution to the "reading war"—the century-old debate over the efficacy of phonics (sound-based) versus whole-word (meaning- based) methods. She has developed a prototype—a set of elements that are critical to the success of a reading method. McGuinness shows that all writing systems, without exception, are based on a sound unit in the language. This fact, and other findings by paleographers, provides a platform for the prototype. Other elements of the prototype are based on modern research. For example, observational studies in the classroom show that time spent on three activities strongly predicts reading success: learning phoneme/symbol correspondences, practice at blending and segmenting phonemes in words, and copying/writing words, phrases, and sentences. Most so-called literacy activities have no effect, and some, like sight word memorization, have a strongly negative effect. The National Reading Panel (2000) summarized the research on reading methods after screening out thousands of studies that failed to meet minimum scientific standards. In an in-depth analysis of this evidence, McGuinness shows that the most successful methods (children reading a year or more above age norms) include all the elements in the prototype. Finally, she argues, because phonics-type methods are consistently shown to be superior to whole-word methods in studies dating back to the 1960s, it makes no sense to continue this line of research. The most urgent question for future research is how to get the most effective phonics programs into the classroom.




Why Our Children Can't Read, and what We Can Do about it


Book Description

A neuropsychologist shows how outmoded methods for teaching reading have resulted in plummeting literacy levels and offers a new program.




My "a" Book


Book Description

A little boy fills his sound box with words beginning with the letter "a."




STEPS To... Reading


Book Description

With this book, anyone can teach a child how to read. Features step-by-step instructions for parents on how to teach short vowel sounds; the difference between "b" and "d", and the 12 most frequently used sight words. Contains online activities; worksheets; short vowel Bingo; phonics board games; vocabulary; recommendations of books for your child's reading level, and more. Written by a developmental psychologist who specializes in teaching children how to read, Steps to...Reading will have every child reading after just a few lessons.




Sound Steps to Reading


Book Description

Sound Steps to Reading is a revolutionary spelling program based on new discoveries about the structure of the English writing system. Research by the author has revealed that about 90 percent of words in print are represented by 176 spellings. When these spellings are taught in an orderly way, consistent with the logic of an alphabet code, students of any age can learn to read and spell with relative ease. Sound Steps to Reading lessons are partially scripted, and no special training is required to teach this program. Lessons are designed to work for all ages and in any setting, ranging from home tutoring to the classroom. Lessons are set out in two programs. Sound Steps to Reading teaches spellings for common English words up to three syllables long. It is designed for students with a reading or spelling age of seven to eight years, who have some knowledge of basic phonics. Allograph I consists of a teacher manual, a spelling dictionary with 3,000 words, and a workbook or storybook.




My "w" Book


Book Description

A little boy fills his sound box with words beginning with the letter "w."




Pat Doran's Phonics Steps to Reading Success


Book Description

Pat Doran's Phonics Steps to Reading Success is a fun, fast-paced, word-attack system for developing and Improving reading and spelling skills [PSRS], 5th Edition. PSRS POCKET PHONICS is compact, convenient, and cost effective. It is a full-color, unabridged PSRS paperback book, 200 pages, 6" x 8".Use alone or as a student textbook companion with the full-color PSRS version. Use for instruction of others or to strengthen one's personal reading and spelling knowledge and skills. SUGGESTED USE: Use alone for personal enrichment, individual tutoring, for class work, independent schoolwork, homework, individual study, or learning centers.