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WORK SPACE
As children enter school, they need to have a designated study
place. This location can be an agreed upon decision, but should
be used consistently. The location should be visible to an adult.
STUDY TIME
If your child has a short attention span, invest in a kitchen timer.
Set it for 15 minutes. If your child is engaged in study during
this time, when the timer goes off, give the child 5 minutes of
free time. If you child has not been working during the 15 minutes,
have the child stand and stretch, then go back to work. Be sure
to practice with your child what studying means, what on task behavior
looks like.
HELP YOUR CHILD BE ORGANIZED
- Color Code
Choose a color for each subject. The book cover has that color,
spiral notebooks or dividers match. Assignments are written in
the matching color.
- Organizers
Have a plastic zipper pouch for pencils, scissors, and loose
supplies.
- Assignment Sheets
Be sure that your child's assignment book has the same format
on each page, e.g., subject, assignments, pages in text, materials
needed, date due. You can make multiple copies of the same page.
- Calendar
Have an 8-1/2 x 11 monthly calendar. Put due dates in red
and a two-day reminder in yellow. You can include whatever important
information is needed for the month.
READING
As your child begins to read narrative stories, graphic organizers
will become important. A story map outlining the setting, characters,
problem, sequence of steps to solve story, and conclusion will help
your child know the important information from the story. When you
child discovers the main idea of the story, have the child say it
to you. You then can tell the story in one simple sentence of no
more than 10 words.
To help reading comprehension, as you read with your child, let
your child read the title and predict what the story will be about.
Help the child tie prior knowledge to the story to support comprehension.
Talk about the story.
Reading ability improves by being engaged in reading. Take turns;
have your child read a favorite page. Read together. If a computer
is available, make use of CD ROM stories, such as Little Monster,
Berenstein Bears, Sheila Rae, Ruff's Bone or
Little Critter. In these CD stories, the words are highlighted
as they are read. Also, children can read and click on words that
they don't know. This is a very enjoyable way to read.
15 MINUTES EVERY DAY
The important component is consistent, daily quality interaction.
The development of literacy requires 15 minutes of quality interaction
each day. Your child needs to see that reading is important to you,
that reading is an enjoyable experience, and that it is worth the
hard work that it may require.
Prepared by:
LDA Early Childhood Committee
September 2002 |
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