Our road to reading started with books. Lots and lots and lots of books.
Our out-of-rotation books |
Did I say lots?
Books that I selected for reading for the quarter |
I collect (hoard) books, I can’t help it. I buy books all the time. Bookshops are like magnets that pull me to a much happier world.
Special books that I keep in my closet |
And I accept donations from my
sister who has less impulse buying control than I do. She passes on to me her older
children’s books in boxes.
Books that I don't know where to put! |
And I keep them all! (Manic
laughter) And my husband knits his bushy eyebrows together and lets out an
unhappy (angry) sigh. And I relent and pass on some of our books to my younger
niece.
But should he wonder about this love affair? I still have the books that I had as a little girl, perfectly
preserved on a shelf in my mother’s house, left there with a warning to never,
ever let anybody touch those books!
Hey, you see? I get highly excited
about books. So, let’s go back to what I really want to talk about today: my
daughter’s road to reading… or how she seemingly taught herself to read at age
three.
We Read From Birth
Being the book lover (hoarder) that I am, we started reading to Little T and
Baby Boy when they were still in my tummy. As soon as I recovered from childbirth, I started reading and singing to them. It was more about them hearing the words than looking at the pictures or the words themselves.
We Taught The Basics
For a few crazy months when Little
T was two, we taught her the alphabet in a really fun way. Basic phonics soon followed. Then a
niggling thought occurred to me, one that made me uncomfortable. I thought, why
would we teach a two-year old child how to read when she was still a baby? Her
job is to play and to explore the world.
We Relaxed
So we stopped. Then we read about
reading and decided not to stress about it. We learned that children will read when they are ready to read and that the strengthening of pre-reading skills, such as enjoying rhymes, is more important.
We did not set a timeline for when our
daughter should be able to read. We were prepared to wait until she was ready.
We were even willing to wait with the Fins, who start formal schooling at age seven.
We Continued Reading
and Reading and Reading
We just continued doing what we have been doing all along: read.
We read before we get up from bed
in the morning, we read when we nurse, we read in the bathroom (books about the potty!), we read
before we take a nap in the afternoon, we read before we drift off to sleep at
night. We read favorite books several times a day, sometimes in just one
sitting, until our throats start to feel itchy.
We read.
Then She Started To Read!
Then Little T started reading by herself. She first read road signs, book titles, headlines. I thought she was just guessing, the
magic of sight words. Then one night, she read two full sentences of
instructions for one of our toys. She was ever so pleased!
From then on, there was no stopping
her. She would pick up books and read aloud. She proved every time that she
could read and that she could understand what she was reading.
I was blown away. After all, I did
not teach her the mechanics of reading. I did not even know about the C-V-C (consonant-vowel-consonant, I researched)
combinations that some people asked me about.
We Provide Support
As Little T’s confidence in reading grows,
she picks up longer books. She reads original chapters of Winnie-the-Pooh, though of course not in one sitting. She reads classic readers that are actually enjoyable: Else Minarik's Little Bear books, Russel Hoban's Frances books, and Arnold Lobel's Frog and Toad books.
When she encounters difficult words, she gets frustrated and I ask Mr. Google for help.
One time she kept saying "bar" instead of "br". A Google search led me to teach her the beginning consonant blends. I made a game by picking out a card ("br", "cr", "dr", etc) and taking turns saying words that begin with the chosen sound. Two nights and we were done. "Br-" is now always "br", "cr-" is "cr" and not "car", and so on.
I am utterly convinced that being surrounded by wonderful books and being read to on a daily basis have provided our child a
smooth road to reading. Reading begets reading. I couldn't have taught her even if I wanted to.
I
am not expecting that Baby Boy will also start reading by three. Every child is different. But we will continue reading to him lots and lots of books, lots and lots of times. There are three of us now who will take turns.
Reading begets reading.
Make magic!
21 comments:
You won't regret it, Mimi!
This is really inspiring! Parang gusto ko na rin maging collector (hoarder) ng books. :) I will definitely expose my daughter to books. You learn a LOT by just reading books.
I'm so glad you did! Welcome!
My 1 year old daughter loves books! Im glad I stumbled on your blog thru chroniclesofanursingmom :)
i really love reading books that's why I make it a point that my children also reading books with me and it became their habits..Because in book, you can go in any places without personally going to that particular place but just by reading. tnx.
Hi Madi! Yes, reading and reading with appreciation are two different things. We should aim to develop love of reading instead of just reading the words :)
Hi Juli! Haha! Oo nga, you're a constant in our inbox hahaha :D My son also didn't like being read to at first. What I did was, I read to him while nursing him hehe. I also chose books that we can sing like Mother Goose Rhymes, and if there's an action word like fall or rock, we make sure to do those too. Now he gets his own books for me to read :)
Haha! Did you see the picture of the books in my closet? I actually told my husband I would buy less clothes so we can have more books hehe. Good job about the yaya!
You're so right! Sanne and I are in heaven working on our online bookshop :D Yes, The books in the Boxcar Children series are so difficult to find, and I haven't found one yet actually. :) My son who's 17 months couldn't sit still also when I tried to read to him. I had to exaggerate (sing, move, dance) my reading for him to get interested. He's now always asking me to read to him :) Love!
oh she will be interested since you're reading to her and sees you read also :)
Ilove reading books as well. :) and although think my baby A is also crazy about books, I hope to make her more Interested in them when she grows up. Id love to see her have lots of books like you do! Itll be fun to see her have a mine library.. :D
Oh wow! Look at all your books! *drool* I love bookstores too; Booksale is my paradise :) Raine, my first daughter, loves reading too. We read to her since birth too. Now she reads on her own. Her favorite so far is the Boxcar Children series (but it's so hard to find!). My second daughter, Breeze, on the other hand, can't sit still long enough to actually go through a whole book or story, even a very short one. But we still try to read to her.
I, too, love books! And I love shopping for books rather than for clothes. So I was so grateful when we got many hand-me-down books from my kids' cousins. I also ask the yaya to read to my one-year-old everyday, so to encourage him to talk already. I hope it works!
Oh! I hope this is true for my little bear! I am starting his library now (obvious ba with my orders hehe), so I'm hoping he'll develop his love for reading too. Right now, he just likes turning the pages and does not want to hear me read to him! :( I hope he'll be able to let me read a whole book to him soon! :))
I was 13 y/o when i started reading (really reading with appreciation), and it was a no choice situation because i was in the hospital (bed ridden) and 1 month rest at home. and i think that's pretty late reading for me.
Now i'm 19, and a Mom to my 7mo baby grl. I'm thinking on how to teach her to love books, so i read to her evry opportunity i get. And i think your right "children will read when they are ready to read ". We will just have to give them the opportunity, like buy books that they will love and to lead by example. Read as well mommies! :)
Don't worry, dear. :) It's not just posts like yours, of course! There are LOTS of other posts on other great blogs that make me — albeit quickly and temporarily — think about how differently our kids are learning. :) I have always had a tendency to "compare" (blame it on my growing-up years, I guess), so it's something I should and am struggling to deal with on a daily basis! :) LOL! :) Thanks for the encouragement! God bless!
Oh no, Tina! The last thing I want for my blog post to do is to induce panic in parents! Your mantra "no pressure" is great as each child is made up differently. I guess I'm just saying (maybe not so coherently? :D) that reading to our kids will naturally lead to their own reading, though the timing will definitely be different for each child. So... you're on your own great road to reading already! :)
Hi, fellow book-hoarder! :) Hope Little T is OK. :) And.. reading this made me wonder, "Well, we read a lot too.. so how come our five-year-old ain't reading yet?!" LOL! But then, "OK, no pressure, no pressure, no pressure! :) Each child is unique!" *sighs* As always, LOVE this! :) Praying for you all always! :)
hehe thank you! :D she looks so different now, but still cute of course haha!
you are so right! :D reading begets reading!
can't get over.. cute ni Little T!!!
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