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Autore principale: Wilson, Lorraine
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2012
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ994303
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author Wilson, Lorraine
author_facet Wilson, Lorraine
Wilson, Lorraine
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Learning to Read and the Preschool Years Wilson, Lorraine Public Libraries Caregivers Preschool Children Library Personnel Reading Aloud to Others Parents Reading Instruction You have young preschool children. You think ahead to when they will begin school, and wonder what you might do to make it easy for your children to learn to read. This article offers some hints for parents and caregivers about learning to read: (1) Reading can begin at birth; (2) When reading aloud to an infant, make the experience a warm, loving one; (3) Re-read favorite books; (4) Encourage children to join in; (5) Encourage children to think beyond the text; and (6) Talk about the title. Parents and caregivers may also take advantage of a nearby public library. Public libraries usually have extensive, up-to-date collections, and the library staff are very informed about books. They can check with them about appropriate books to borrow for particular ages. Moreover, parents and caregivers can talk about any environmental print they see when out in the local community with their child. When children have been read aloud to in the preschool years, they enter school knowing so much about reading. (Contains 3 online resources.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ994303
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2012
record_format eric
spellingShingle Learning to Read and the Preschool Years
Wilson, Lorraine
Public Libraries
Caregivers
Preschool Children
Library Personnel
Reading Aloud to Others
Parents
Reading Instruction
Learning to Read and the Preschool Years Wilson, Lorraine Public Libraries Caregivers Preschool Children Library Personnel Reading Aloud to Others Parents Reading Instruction You have young preschool children. You think ahead to when they will begin school, and wonder what you might do to make it easy for your children to learn to read. This article offers some hints for parents and caregivers about learning to read: (1) Reading can begin at birth; (2) When reading aloud to an infant, make the experience a warm, loving one; (3) Re-read favorite books; (4) Encourage children to join in; (5) Encourage children to think beyond the text; and (6) Talk about the title. Parents and caregivers may also take advantage of a nearby public library. Public libraries usually have extensive, up-to-date collections, and the library staff are very informed about books. They can check with them about appropriate books to borrow for particular ages. Moreover, parents and caregivers can talk about any environmental print they see when out in the local community with their child. When children have been read aloud to in the preschool years, they enter school knowing so much about reading. (Contains 3 online resources.)
title Learning to Read and the Preschool Years
topic Public Libraries
Caregivers
Preschool Children
Library Personnel
Reading Aloud to Others
Parents
Reading Instruction
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ994303