The Thoughtful Spot

Friday, May 9, 2008

“A” for Abιcιdaire

Posted in Reading

The girls are working on their own ABC books. I have a box full of pictures I have cut out of old cards and magazines. We choose a letter to focus on, and then I have them search through the pictures for things that begin with that letter, and they arrange them on the page. They write the letter themselves, but I write the words underneath. I think their abécédaires will make nice keepsakes.

Rébecca

Annalissa

Katja


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Friday, April 25, 2008

Learning the Alphabet is Child’s Play

Posted in Reading
Children understand at a very young age that letters are important and have meaning. They can begin learning their letters as soon as they show an interest. However, it should always be a kind of game to them; the young child should never be forced to pick out his letters when he would rather play with his ball. 
 
The letters should be associated with the initial sound of some word of interest to the child. We often use the name of a person: A-Annalissa; K-Katja; R-Rebecca; G-Gabriel; M-Maman; P-Papa. Children learn to recognise the most interesting letters very quickly. Although it is useful to know the letter names, it is most important, of course, that the child identify the letter with its sound. 
 
One game we like to play, suggested by Miss Mason, is tracing the letters in the air, from memory. We begin with the uppercase letters, each one having distinctive features (as opposed to lowercase ‘b’, and ‘d’, ‘p’ and ‘q’, for example). I trace a letter in the air and ask the children to name it, and give its sound. Sometimes they make a letter for me to guess. 
 
Another favourite activity is writing letters in a tray of cornmeal. Miss Mason recommends keeping a tray of sand handy. I had no sand, but found some cornmeal on liquidation and emptied them into a plastic container. The children can hardly wait for their turn when I pull this out! We use it for practise writing letters and numbers. 
 
After learning a new letter, the children hunt for it in pages of text, which helps to fix the image in their minds. We only have to do this exercise once; after that, they point out the letters they know whenever they see them! 
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Thursday, April 17, 2008

Now she can read.

Posted in Reading

"May I look at Little House in the Big Woods?"  Katja asked this morning. 

"I'll let you have it if you read me the whole first page, "I answered. 

She groaned and said she didn't think she could do it, but she would try because she really wanted to look at the book.  What she didn't know was we have been working in learning the first chapter of this book in our reading lessons.  She read through the first page easily (and didn't even stumble on "Wisconsin", which we hadn't learned, because she remembered the story took place there), turned the page and kept on going.  Papa was listening and was very impressed.  Katja felt a huge sense of accomplishment!


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Thursday, March 20, 2008

Our First Year Readers

Posted in Reading
“Even for their earliest reading lessons, it is unnecessary to put twaddle into the hands of children.” - Charlotte Mason.
 
Dick and Jane
We have a set of three that were our very first readers. They are perhaps a bit twaddly, however, they served our purpose well, giving Katja a good base of commonly used words.   My reluctant reader appreciated the fact that each story was short and amusing. All the children love the illustrations and the stories, and still ask Katja to read to them from Dick and Jane!
 
A Child’s Garden of Verses – Robert Louis Stevenson, illustrated by Tasha Tudor
We’ve read through the entire book, but have only used a couple of these for reading lessons so far. We continue to return to it.
 
Mary Engelbreit’s Mother Goose
This is a favourite with everyone! Katja has read many of these, and this book also doubles as picture study at the moment. What delightful illustrations for their internal picture gallery!
 
Little Bear and Little Bear’s Friend – Else Homelund Minarik
Katja loved these stories, and was very pleased with herself when she had finished an entire book. She still likes to read them to the younger children.
 
One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish – Dr. Seuss
Dr. Seuss is always fun. This one was good to reinforce phonics rules. 
 
1 is One – Tasha Tudor
I chose this one to teach the numbers, but she learned all sorts of beautiful, interesting words from this book, like heath, nibbling rye, and gourds. We are now taking our copywork selections are taken from this book and the little children are learning to count and write numbers. 
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Friday, October 19, 2007

The First Reading Lesson

Posted in Reading
The biggest improvement in our school this term has been in our reading lessons.  I have been following Charlotte Mason's method as closely as possible, and I am ery pleased with Katja's progress.  To illustrate what we have been doing, I am posting an example these pages from Home Education, by Charlotte Mason.
[It is so important that children should be taught to read in a rational way, that I introduce two papers––by the writer––which have appeared in Parents' Review, in the hope that they will make the suggested method fairly clear & familiar.]
(Two Mothers Confer)
"You don't mean to say you would go plump into words of three or four syllables before a child knows his letters?"
"It is possible to read words without knowing the alphabet, as you know a face without singling out its features; but we learn not only the names but the sounds of the letters before we begin to read words."
"Our children learn their letters without any teaching. We always keep by us a shallow table drawer, the bottom covered half an inch deep with sand. Before they are two, the babies make round O and crooked S, and T for Tommy, and so on, with dumpy, uncertain little fingers. The elder children teach the little ones by way of a game."
"The sand is capital! We have various devices, but none so good as that. Children love to be doing. The funny, shaky lines the little finger makes in the sand will be ten times as interesting as the shapes the eye sees."
"But the reading! I can't get over three syllables in the first lesson. Why, it's like teaching a twelve-months old child to waltz."
"You say that because we forget that a group of letters is no more than the sign of a word, while a word is only the vocal sign of a thing or an act. This is how the child learns. First, he gets the notion of the table; he sees several tables; he finds they have legs, by which you can scramble up; very often covers which you may pull off; and on them many things lie, good and pleasant for a baby to enjoy; sometimes, too, you can pull these things off the table, and they go down with a bang, which is nice. The grown-up people call this pleasant thing, full of many interests, 'table,' and, by-and-by, baby says 'table' too; and the word 'table' comes to mean, in a vague way, all this to him. 'Around table,' 'on the table,' and so on, form part of the idea of 'table' to him. In the same way baby chimes in when his mother sings. She says, 'Baby, sing,' and, by-and-by, notions of 'sing,' 'kiss,' 'love,' dawn on his brain."
"Yes, the darlings! and it's surprising how many words a child knows even before he can speak them; '*****,' 'dolly,' 'carriage,' soon convey interesting ideas to him."
"That's just it. Interest the child in the thing, and he soon learns the sound-sign for it––that is, its name. Now, I maintain that, when he is a little older, he should learn the form-sign––that is, the printed word––on the same principle. It is far easier for a child to read plum-pudding than to read 'to, to,' because 'plum-pudding' conveys a far more interesting idea."
"That may be, but when he gets into words of three or four syllables; but what would you do while he's in words of one syllable––indeed, of two or three letters?"
"I should never put him into words of one syllable at all. The bigger the word, the more striking the look of it, and, therefore, the easier it is to read, provided always that the idea it conveys is interesting to a child. It is sad to see an intelligent child toiling over a reading lesson infinitely below his capacity––ath, eth, ith, oth, uth––or, at the very best, 'The cat sat on the mat.' How should we like to begin to read German, for example, by toiling over all conceivable combinations of letters, arranged on no principle but similarity of sound; or, worse still, that our readings should be graduated according to the number of letters each word contains? We should be lost in a hopeless fog before a page of words of three letters all drearily like one another, with no distinctive features for the eye to seize upon; but the child? 'oh, well––children are different; no doubt it is good for the child to grind in this mill!' But this is only one of many ways in which children are needlessly and cruelly oppressed!"
"You are taking high moral ground! All the same, I don't think I am convinced. It is far easier for a child to spell cat, cat, than to spell plum-pudding, plum-pudding."
"But spelling and reading are two things. You must learn to spell in order to write words, not to read them. A child is droning over a reading-lesson, spells c o u g h; you say 'cough,' and she repeats. By dint of repetition, she learns at last to associate the look of the word with the sound, and says 'cough' without spelling it; and you think she has arrived at 'cough' through c o u g h. Not a bit of it; c o f spells cough!"
"Yes; but 'cough' has a silent u, and a gh with the sound of f. There, I grant, is a great difficulty. If only there were no silent letters, and if all letters had always the same sound, we should, indeed, have reading made easy. The phonetic people have something to say for themselves."
"You would agree with the writer of an article in a number of a leading review: 'Plough ought to be written and printed plow; through, thru; enough, enuf; ought, aut or ort'; and so on. All this goes on the mistaken idea that in reading we look at the letters which compose a word, think of their sounds, combine these, and form the word. We do nothing of the kind; we accept a word, written or printed, simply as the symbol of a word we are accustomed to say. If the word is new to us we may try to make something of the letters, but we know so well that this is a shot in the dark, that we are careful not to say the new word until we have heard someone else say it."
"Yes, but children are different."
"Children are the same, 'only more so.' We could, if we liked, break up a word into its sounds, or put certain sounds together to make a word. But these are efforts beyond the range of children. First, as last, they learn to know a word by the look of it, and the more striking it looks the easier it is to recognise; provided always that the printed word is one which they already know very well by sound and by sense."
"It is not clear yet; suppose you tell me, step by step, how you would give your first reading lesson. An illustration helps so much."
"Very well: Bobbie had his first lesson yesterday––on his sixth birthday. The lesson was part of the celebration. By the way, I think it's rather a good idea to begin a new study with a child on his birthday, or some great day; he begins by thinking the new study a privilege."
"That is a hit. But go on; did Bobbie know his letters?"
"Yes, he had picked them up, as you say; but I had been careful not to allow any small readings. You know how Susanna Wesley used to retire to her room with the child who was to have his first reading-lesson, and not to appear again for some hours, when the boy came out able to read a good part of the first chapter of Genesis? Well, Bobbie's first reading-lesson was a solemn occasion, too, for which we had been preparing for a week or two. First, I bought a dozen penny copies of the 'History of Cock Robin'––good bold type, bad pictures, that we cut out.
Then we had a nursery pasting day––pasting the sheets on common drawing-paper, six one side down, and six the other; so that now we had six complete copies, and not twelve.
Then we cut up the first page only, of all six copies, line by line, and word by word. We gathered up the words and put them in a box, and our preparations were complete.
Now for the lesson. Bobbie and I are shut in by ourselves in the morning room. I always use a black-board in teaching the children. I write up, in good clear 'print' hand,
          Cock Robin
Bobbie watches with more interest because he knows his letters. I say, pointing to the word, 'cock robin,' which he repeats.
"Then the words in the box are scattered on the table, and he finds half a dozen 'cock robins' with great ease.
We do the same thing with 'sparrow,' 'arrow,' 'said,' 'killed,' 'who,' and so on, till all the words in the verse have been learned. The words on the black-board grow into a column, which Bob reads backwards and forwards, and every way, except as the words run in the verse.
Then Bobbie arranges the loose words into columns like that on the board.
Then into columns of his own devising, which he reads off.
Lastly, culminating joy (the whole lesson has been a delight!), he finds among the loose words, at my dictation,
     'Who killed Cock Robin
     I said the sparrow
     With my bow and arrow
     I killed Cock Robin,'
Arranging the words in verse form. Then I had still one unmutilated copy, out of which Bob had the pleasure of reading the verse, and he read it forwards and backwards. So long as he lives he will know those twelve words."
"No doubt it was a pleasant lesson; but, think of all the pasting and cutting!"
"Yes, that is troublesome. I wish some publisher would provide us with what we want––nursery rhymes, in good bold type, with boxes of loose words to match, a separate box, or division, for each page, so that the child may not be confused by having too many words to hunt amongst. The point is that he should see, and look at, the new word many times, so that its shape becomes impressed upon his brain."
"I see; but he is only able to read 'Cock Robin'; he has no general power of reading."
"On the contrary, he will read those twelve words wherever he meets with them. Suppose he learns ten words a day, in half a year he will have at least six hundred words; he will know how to read a little."
"Excellent, supposing your children remember all they learn. At the end of a week, mine would remember 'Cock Robin,' perhaps, but it the rest would be gone!"
"Oh, but we keep what we get! When we have mastered the words of the second verse, Bob runs through the first in the book, naming words here and there as I point to them. It takes less than a minute, and the ground is secured."
"The first lesson must have been long?"
"I'm sorry to say it lasted half an hour. The child's interest tempted me to do more than I should."
"It all sounds very attractive––a sort of game––but I cannot be satisfied that a child should learn to read without knowing the powers of the letters. You constantly see a child spell a word over to himself, and then pronounce it; the more so, if he has been carefully taught the sounds of the letters––not merely their names."
"Naturally; for though many of our English words are each a law unto itself, others offer a key to a whole group, as arrow gives us sp arrow, m arrow, h arrow; but we have alternate days––one for reading, the other for word-building––and that is one way to secure variety, and, so, the joyous interest which is the real secret of success."
Home Education, by Charlotte Mason, pp. 207-214.

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Wednesday, December 7, 2005

Annalissa can read, too!

Posted in Reading

Annalissa is really coming along with her word recognition.  Yesterday, she read through most of her cards without hesitation.  She only missed "confiture", which she just can't seem to get somehow.  I don't know why, since she doesn't have any other word that resembles it.  Anyway, I was happy for her.  You can tell she is pleased when she knows she has done well.  And reading makes her feel like a big girl, like her older sister. 

 

 


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Tuesday, November 15, 2005

This says Annalissa!

Posted in Reading

Today, Katja wrote her name perfectly without assistance.  Previously, she wrote all the proper letters in whichever order pleased her.  Both the girls have enjoyed practising forming letters in a tray of rice, and it has helped their writing. 

 

Katja also impressed me today by pointing out all the sounds in Annalissa.  She was holding another card in front of her card that says "Annalissa" and slowly revealing each part of the word. 

"Look, Maman!  This says "A" ... "An!"..."Anna!  Like Anna!!!"(A lady at church)... An-na-liss-a!" 

I had never gone over those sounds with her before.  She has learned to recognize words as a whole. 

 

I'm teaching them to read (only in French for now) using the method described in Lire ΰ 3 ans by Franηoise Boulanger (called Le bonheur de lire for the new edition).  You can read more about it on her website le bonheur de lire.  So far it is working very well for us, and it is very "CM compatible.  Without any formal "phonics" instruction, Katja is making the sound-written symbol connections on her own. 


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"It is much to be wished that thoughtful mothers would more often keep account of the methods they employ with their children, with some definite note of the success of this or that plan." - Charlotte Mason.

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