Pre-Reading Skills
Why read aloud?
When reading aloud, you are giving your child a gift of your
undivided attention, adding a peaceful moment to your stressful schedule, opening doors to a world of possibilities, and setting the stage for a lifelong love of learning. You are also giving
your child essential pre-reading skills. As you read aloud to your child, each of these
vital skills will slip into your child's knowledge. See the
Pre-Reading Skills Booklists page for
titles that focus on the individual skills described below.
VocabularyYour child's vocabulary is the collection of words he or she can
understand. There
is a direct correlation between the size and richness of kindergartners'
vocabularies and their school success. Books will introduce more than three times the number
of words to your child than television and everyday conversation. After
all, when was the last time you turned to someone and used the words
"exclaimed" or "replied" in a sentence?
Print Awareness
Print awareness is the knowledge that the print
on a page is what is being read by someone who knows how to read. Print awareness is
also the understanding that a written language follows basic rules. In
English, these rules include text flowing from top to bottom and left to
right. A child who is beginning to acquire this skill
might point to words on the page while a caregiver is reading a story.
Narrative
Skills
Narrative skills include being able to understand and tell stories and
being able to describe things. A child with this skill can explain what he
or she did at the zoo or retell a book you read
together.
Letter Knowledge
Letter knowledge is understanding that letters
are different from each other—that each letter has a name and its own
sound. Learning the alphabet is most important, yet
activities like finding certain letters in signs and words or playing with
magnetic letters can also encourage letter knowledge.
Print Motivation
Print motivation is a child's interest in and
enjoyment of books. A child with good print motivation enjoys being
read to, pretends to read and write, and likes trips to the library and
bookstore.
Phonological
Sensitivity
Phonological sensitivity is the ability to hear
and manipulate the smaller sounds in words. This understanding helps
children break the code between written language and spoken language.
Examples of phonological sensitivity are the ability to tell if words
rhyme, the ability to put two words together to make one word ("cow" +
"boy"), and the ability to say words with sounds or parts left out (what
is bat without the "buh" sound?). When a child makes up silly words by
changing a part or sound, such as saying: "milk," "nilk," "pilk," "rilk,"
etc., he or she shows the beginnings of phonological sensitivity. Build
this skill by reading stories that rhyme aloud to your
child.
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