Sue Klund 2006 - [email protected]
November 17, 2006
Champlin Mom’s Club
You are going to learn 3 secrets that will help your child/children be
better readers forever!
Parents Make the Difference
The 90% Reading Goal by Lynn Fielding, Nancy Kerr and Paul Rosier (1998)
• Imagine a kid who practices batting and pitching a ball to his dad an hour every day all summer, from the time the child is three until he is eight. (May, June, July, August - 120 hours a year for 5 years)
• Imagine a second kid - no practice, no training, has never slipped his hand in a baseball glove, has never run the bases, has never swung a bat, has almost never seen a full game played.
• Imagine that they turn out the same day for Little League try-outs.
• The skill level between these two young ball players is like the skill level in reading readiness of our incoming kindergarteners.
Trelease Says We Must Share The Secrets About Reading With Everyone
• Secret #1
Children begin the process of learning to read from the day they are born - or before.
Many children come to school with a “head” start in reading because they’ve heard so many more words. It’s the words in the head,
not the toys in the house,
that make the difference. The more you talk and read to a child, the larger the child’s speaking and reading vocabularies. If a child hasn’t heard a word, it’s harder to read and write it.
Trelease - 2003
Elementary School
Kids Can’t Wait To Learn!2004 The Trust For Early Education www.Kidslearn.info
Before entering kindergarten
According to Marilyn Jager Adams, a child
needs 10,000 to 12,000 words in his/her
vocabulary in order to successfully begin to
learn to read.
In a longitudinal study done by Risley and Hart
It was found that the more interaction a baby
experienced from birth, the larger their vocabulary when
entering school.
Meaningful Differences in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children
Language Development in Young Children
Five - Year - Old Entering Kindergarten Who Has Been Interacting Yearly
(read to, talked to, played with) For:
50 hours
2 min / day
1800 hours
1 hour / day
2,000 hours
1.1 hr / day
4,000 or fewer
words
8,000 - 10,000
words
10,000 - 12,000
words
2,000 words
Growth
2,500 words 3,000 words
birth
KHigher S
.E.S
Low S.E.S
John Pikulski - What Really Makes a Difference in Reading?
IRA 2003
Adapted from David Russel by Alton Greenfield
Meaning
The Arts of Processing Language
1st Order
2nd Order
Receptive Expressive
ExpressiveReceptive
ProfessionalWorking
ClassPoverty
-------------------------------------------------------------45 million
--------------------------------------26 million
------------13 million
Total words addressed to child by age 4
Jim Trelease says:
This is one of the
best kept secrets
in American
Education.
Someone has to be telling all parents and caregivers that some
things are important for our babies.• Sing to them• Read to them • Play with them • Bring them to the park• Love them dearly • Bring them to Grandpa and Grandma’s house • Find a grandpa or grandma for them• Tell them your family stories• Teach them nursery rhymes• Talk to them about what you are doing around them• Tell them stories, have fun with books, use voices
Oprah Should Be Talking About Reading 8 books a day to
Children
She could do this Once a Week
What else could we be doing?
• Give books to newborns in hospitals.
• Collect books to give to the food-shelf.
• Tell your children why this is so important.
• Put this message on billboards all over the state of Minnesota.
• Ask your faith communities to help.
• Give 8 books to a new baby.
• Play peek-a-boo with the new baby.
• Sing to the baby.• Tell nursery rhymes to
the baby.• Talk to the baby about
what you are doing.• Use voices when you
read to a baby.
Trelease Says We Must Share The Secrets About Reading
With Everyone• Secret #1 • Secret #2
You can help raise your child’s reading level at home - and it is easy - must be FUN - and will last forever!
Reading Rank
Minutes read at home per day
90th
50th
10th
37 min.
11 min.
1 min.
In one year, top students read 2.25 million more words than bottom students
Trelease from Anderson, et al, “Growth in Reading and How Children Spend Their Time Outside of School.” Reading Research Quarterly, Summer 1988.
Look What Happens When Children Read at Home!
Reading Levels
Comp. Wd Recog.
Listening 85%
Frustration <80% <90%
Instructional 80% 90-95%
Independent 90& 95%
Daryl’s Way of Finding a Perfect Fit in a Book
•K-1 - Count out 50 words in the book you are going to read. Place a post-it note there. If it can be read with only two mistakes, the book is for you. If not, look for another book.•2nd and older - Count out 100 words in the book you are going to read. Place a post-it note there. If it can be read with only three mistakes, the book is for you. If not, look for another book.
Lexile Website Can Be a Valuable Tool to Find the Reading Level of a Book
www.lexile.com
450 2.5 M green
Write in title…
Get…
Book Lists for Helping Readers Find Books
• “Wordless Book List” for primer readers or students who are learning English
• “Series Book List” for helping caregivers and grandparents find FUN books the child will want to read.
• “Books for Boys” list. Let me know if you have some to add to it.
• Don’t forget the books that are songs.
How will my child understand this? Won’t s/he feel “dumb”
reading easy books? • Explain how long they worked at riding a
bike, or learning to swim or play a piano or a musical instrument before they felt confident.
• Explain that this is a brain exercise - and the results will be unbelievable and last for their whole lives.
• Each child will have a different “diagnosis” with a different “treatment.”
Louisa Moats Says….. ”Reading, Spelling and Writing Disabilities…..”
Like a child who rides a bike too slowly to keep it upright, a reader who reads too slowly will lose the meaning.
Trelease Says We Must Share The Secrets About Reading
With Everyone
If a child reads at least 6 books during the summer, s/he will maintain his/her reading level all summer.
•Secret 1 •Secret 2
•Secret 3
Six Books! That’s All It Takes…..
•Studies show that when a child reads as few as six appropriately grade-leveled books, he or she is likely to fend off summer reading loss and maintain the reading gains made during the previous school year.
•And when a child reads even more - 8 or 10 or 20 - s/he may gain ground.
Dana Trudy - Editor of Scholastic’s Instructor May/June 2003 p. 4
Oral Reading Fluency Grade 2 - 5
Grade Percentile Fall
WCPM
Winter
WCPM
Spring
WCPM
2 75
50
82
53
106
78
124
94
3 75
50
107
79
123
93
142
114
4 75
50
125
99
133
112
143
118
5 75
50
126
105
143
118
151
128
Mrs. Klund’s GrandchildrenCame into 5th grade with same score as end of 4th grade
Came into 5th grade with higher score than the end of 4th grade
QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
Secret #1
Clues:
Where will you share this secret?
Secret #2
Clue #1
Clue #2
Where will you share this secret?
Secret #3
Clue #1
Clue #2
Where will you share this secret?
Don’t keep these secrets any longer!
Share them with the world - starting today!