Posts Tagged ‘literacy’

Just wanted to say hi to everyone visiting from No Time For Flashcards. I had a great weekend getting to know Allie better. She’s as adorable and brilliant in real life as on her blog. I really admire Allie’s dedication to children’s education and providing resources for parents to make magical moments with their little ones.

Like she said, I focus on crafts, music and literacy. My goal is to help you interact with your children at any age in a way that’s joyful to you and your child. Here are a few of my favorite posts so far!

Crafts

Bari Koral Photo Credit: Megan Moloy

Music

Literacy

Thanks again for stopping by! Hope to see you again in the future, at least on Allie’s fan page on Facebook. Have a great Sunday.




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I love words. When I read, I am driven by the words on the page. As fast as I can absorb the words determines how quickly I turn the pages. This is fine for reading grown up books with few or no illustrations, but I tend to carry this over into my reading with the girls. I’ve really had to work at slowing down and looking at the pictures with them and answering the random questions that arise, entirely unrelated to the storyline, because of the illustrations. Even when I am trying consciously to allow time for studying the pictures, I still get caught up in the words. For this reason I now LOVE Chicken and Cat Clean Up.

Chicken and Cat Clean Up came to us from Scholastic for review. When Sammi first pulled it from the pile and wanted me to read it, I expected your typical picture book. But I was surprised when I opened the book and there were no words to read. I turned to the next page to see if there were words. None. I turned the page again. Hmmm. I was at a lost. So I went back to the beginning to figure out how to “read” this book to Sammi. But, Sammi’s observations and imagination came through to make this book a big hit.

We poured over the pictures on each page and looked for all the details that would help us understand the story. There is a little bit of print throughout the book, but almost all of it can be figured out through the illustrations. After we went through the book a couple of times, Sammi went off to her baby dolls to tell them the story over and over again. Then it occurred to me that this book was perfect for developing the early literacy narrative skill.

Storytelling is a part of developing literacy. When little ones understand the structure of stories, that they have a beginning, a middle and an end, they are better able to process the meaning of the words in the story. Retelling stories, or even making up their own, is great practice in developing literacy skills. I love to watch Sammi, and now Elli too, sit with a book and turn the pages as they retell the story to each other and their dolls. Sammi even has mastered holding the book facing away from her and “reading” it from the side. Elli is great at holding up the book and showing off the page to the whole room before turning the page and looking at the book herself again.

So, back to Chicken and Cat Clean Up. The illustrations are engaging, simple, but full of detail. The story is a bit of a page turner because you just wonder if it really could get any worse for poor Cat and then the ending is charming. I like this book not only for its strength in helping kids develop narrative skills necessary for literacy, but also because it created the opportunity for me to forget the words and lose myself in the illustrations. It really helped me experience literature from my little ones’ perspective; to remember what books are like when you can’t read; and how much joy there can be in that experience.

Use the code SSVDAY at Scholastic to receive 20% and free shipping if your order is $25 or more. This code is valid until Feb 1 (that’s Tuesday already!) This post is part of the Winter Wonderland Carnival. If you haven’t already, you can enter to win one of our great prizes from our fabulous sponsors. Please visit Join the Winter Wonderland and leave a comment. For an additional entry, you can also leave a comment on this post. We’ve also added this post to Adventu1re Mom Janna’s Feed Me Books Friday. Please visit to find other books to share with little ones!

What is your favorite story that you’ve heard your little one tell? What is your favorite story to tell you little one?
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One of our favorite winter activities has been curling up on the couch with a blanket and a stack of books to read. Sammi has definitely moved into longer picture books. I’ve been surprised at how long Elli also sits still on my lap and listens as I read these long books.

We received a few more books from Scholastic in the fall to review. Sammi’s instant favorite was from the series Adventures with Riley and is called the Polar Bear Puzzle. The first time we looked at it I thought it was going to be a flop. It’s a fictional story with nonfiction facts dotting the pages and running through the storyline. I didn’t think Sammi would like the length of the story. Boy was I wrong on all counts!

She loved learning about polar bears. She loved the storyline and the mixed media illustrations. After we read the book, she poured over each page remembering what information went with each picture. If she couldn’t exactly remember, she’d have me read it again, but then she went back to exploring the book on her own. She has carried that book around the house, to the store and even to bed on occasion for the last few months. I really am surprised that she picked such a sophisticated book to love.

That’s a credit to the book, I think. It took a difficult concept—global warming and its effects on the polar bear population—and made it come to life for Sammi. It’s been great to reinforce the winter season by talking about animals that depend on the cold weather as part of their life cycle.

Another book we received from Scholastic that has been a lot of fun for the girls is Marsupials by Nic Bishop. The photographs in this book are such a treat. There’s a lot of information on each marsupial. Honestly we haven’t read every word of every page, but one main sentence is larger and contrasted from the rest of the page. It serves to give us the main feel for the animal and then we also read the caption for the picture. I love that Sammi and Elli, too, both love looking at this nonfiction book. It’s a great introduction to using books to find facts because it makes the information accessible in a brief sentence without losing the depth of what older readers would want to find as well.

This post is part of Winter Wonderland. If you haven’t already, please enter to win one of the great prizes from our sponsors. Just leave a comment on Join the Winter Wonderland. For an additional entry, you can leave a comment on this post, too.

What books has your little one loved that surprised you?
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Amber’s Note: I mentioned on Tuesday that Rock and Roll Garden was released but I was mistaken. It’s actually available beginning today! Bari Koral wanted it to coincide with the day she left for her honeymoon! Isn’t that fantastic, especially given why she wanted to get into kids’ music in the first place! Wishing Bari all the best this week.

When we first introduced books to Sammi around four or five months she only engaged with the ones that followed a song. She loved all the nursery rhyme books and all the ones that were fingerplays. We read/sang them over and over again. She squealed and clapped her hands, and then she started to turn the pages herself. then one day we were brave enough to attempt a non-music book again. It was short and rhyme-y and she loved it! This then opened up a new world for us. As long as it had a good rhyming pattern with a melodic flow, she loved it.

We progressed from that to non-song, non-melodic books and eventually she got really interested in stories. At first it was just really short, board book length stories. Now she can sit through books that are almost too long for my attention span and then ask for them again! And again!

Music is a great way to introduce books to little ones who don’t take an initial interest in books or holding still. If you can engage them with the song and have the book open next to you. They eventually make the connection. Two skills in emergent literacy are print motivation and phonological awareness. With print motivation you are trying to create a pleasant experience for your little one with books. By doing something your child loves-singing and dancing-while reading a book, you’re more likely to have a positive experience and so is your little one!

Music with its rhythm and rhymes is a great tool for little ones to understand language better. The rhythm of music helps little ones to hear all the parts of a word and sentence. The begin to understand the flow of language through music. Songs that rhyme help little ones to understand that sounds can be repeated in different words. This helps them to build their vocabulary by linking new words to already-known words because they share a similar sound.

Here are some great books that carry a tune:

What musical books have you discovered? A comment on today’s post is an extra entry in this week’s giveaway!

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2009 was a fun, fast and fantastic year for our family. Because Babies Grow Up launched on New Year’s Day 2009. Given all that’s happened in the last year, I’ve spent some serious time reflecting on all our experiences. I’d like to share some highlights from the year as well as some of the most popular posts.

Here we are with Carol Rice

Here we are with Carol Rice

My Highlights from 2009

Amazing New Friends

operation-playtimeI met some amazing people through blogging and have developed some pretty cool friendships over the last year. As I started my blogging, I was invited to participate in Play ActivitiesOperation Playtime. Melitsa has become a close friend and encourager over the last year. We both released our first eBooks in 2009. I enjoyed reviewing Treasure Basket Play and hosting a giveaway just this month.

sassyscoopsI also enjoyed meeting many of the gals from Sassy Scoops long before they formed this amazing marketing team. Vanessa of I Never Grew Up drew me in with her Nature Days. Through her I was able to meet Jyl of Mom It Forward and subsequently get involved in local blogger events in Utah such as the Goldsmith Jewelers pearl necklace promotion and the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival. Through the TSF I re-met Carol Rice and was able to be a mommy blogger for the Jonesborough Storytelling Festival in Tennessee. All that, alone, was enough to keep our year busy and exciting. But there was more.

Favorite Products

Toward the end of 2009 our product reviews have focused primarily on music for children and families. We have added some terrific music to our collection and look forward to finding more great albums to share in 2010. My favorite from 2009 isn’t actually on sale yet, but it will be in just a few weeks. It’s Bari Koral’s Rock and Roll Garden. While we were away from home over the holidays the girls had a few days of being out of sorts. I just popped this CD in and it worked like a charm every time to bring my girls back into good spirits.

Another favorite of the year was Wow! Wow! Wubzy! Pirate Treasure. Even Brent enjoys listening to this when driving the car. Elli has just started trying to say Wow! Wow! Wubzy! and it’s too cute! We also love our Band in a Box from Melissa and Doug and use the instruments weekly as we make our own music.

My Favorite Posts

I was so sad to hear that Reading Rainbow was taken off the air and then further saddened by the reasoning behind the decision. I already described my feelings and elaborated on the overlooked need Reading Rainbow filled in creating lifetime readers.

I was fascinated by the benefits of rocking I learned from a child development professor at BYU. This post is one of my favorites because it shows just how perfect mothers are for their children.

While Brent was away at Officer Training for the Air Force, I wrote this post containing my thoughts on love. Fulling loving another person, spouse, child, parent or friend, entails a bit of hurt along with a wealth of joy.

Most Popular Posts in 2009

  1. The End of Reading Rainbow
  2. Twinkle Twinkle Little Star Crafts
  3. Musical Monday: Twinkle Twinkle Little Star
  4. Gingerbread House Frosting Recipe
  5. More Pumpkin Crafts and a Book
  6. Monster Mania: Crafts for Little Monsters
  7. Laptime Songs for Mommies eBook
  8. Physical Friday: Crawling
  9. Leaves Are Falling
  10. Pumpkin Snack and Craft


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We received a few more books from Scholastic. We’ve had lots of fun discovering the stories and information they hold. I’m always caught off guard by the books Sammi is drawn to. But more on that later…

9780439903646_xlgI’m really excited about the book we received that fits perfectly with Thanksgiving happening in just a few weeks. It’s called I’m a Turkey! by Jim Arnosky. You may remember him from Gobble It Up!, a book about what different animals eat.

The girls and I are going to learn the song this week that goes with I’m a Turkey! I’ll let you know how that goes and how the girls like the book :) I also have a cute turkey craft to share with you, so come back tomorrow to check it out.

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We swapped a book through I Never Grew Up last year and it was super fun! I’m really excited to participate again this year. Hopefully Sammi and Elli can help me pick out a book to swap. Originally I thought it was to swap any book during the holidays. But I think the purpose is to swap a holiday-themed book. I’ll be more with it this year ;)

Last year we got the cute book A Firefly in a Fir Tree by Hilary Knight from a lady and her daughter in Massachusetts. Sammi just loved it and I’m excited to pull it back out for the holidays this year.

If you’re interested in participating in the book swap, check out Vanessa’s post about the holiday book swap for details.

I know it’s early, but what are your favorite holiday books?
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Since our “untimely” move to Tennessee did not allow me to attend the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival, I passed my tickets onto a friend of mine you may remember from this post on literacy. She and her family attended the first day of the Storytelling Festival on Thursday. I received this wonderful email from her telling me about their experience. I thought I would share it with you and encourage you to get tickets if you don’t have any yet! September 5th is the last day of the Festival, so you’ll want to hurry. Here’s what Rebecka shared about their experience:

Amber,
You know the story telling festival began today, and I am amazed at
how blessed we are that you thought of us to take your ticket. We went
to the “Look Who’s Talking” event. We heard six storytellers. It was
the best entertainment we’ve seen in, well forever. From touching to
hysterical we were enthralled, and tonight was only the
“taste of what’s to come.”  Steve’s favorite was Bil Lepp who told a
story of being chased by 5 wild dogs and 500 prairie dogs while he
tried to run away on the 12 ft high stilts he’d built to stand on
while he painted the second story windows of his home. Every time Bil
would say, “Oh yeah, I forgot to tell you…….” the story became
more and more crazy and unbelievable. Steve was banging his head on my
knee he was so caught up in the ridiculousness of it all.

Heather Forest told a Jewish folk tale that is the beginning of the
phrase “words like feathers fly.” Her song has the lyrics “cruel words
like feathers fly.” I hope she has recorded this story. I want to use
it in my elementary school classroom.

Barry and I enjoyed all the tellers but were especially delighted with
Carmen Agra Deedy. She told a story that could have happened to any of
us, parts of which have happened to all of us, with voices and faces
that were…….I can’t think of a description, partly because her
performance was beyond words and partly because my past-bed-time brain
is beyond words.

The kids are especially looking forward to hearing Bill Harley
tomorrow. I’m excited for them to have an experience so rich. I was
teasing Steve and asked if the show wasn’t better than playing PS2. He
surprised me by having to debate about which he would rather do: Play
PS2 or listen to stories. This tells me that he NEEDS to hear stories.
Thank you for the perfect medicine.

I will use part of this email in the blog post I promised. Or if you
want to post some of it now feel free. It’s not too late for your
readers to get tickets. And you can see just one event if you want.
www.timpfest.org

Thanks again, Rebecka
PS I hope you are well, miss you and your sweet girls

Thanks for such a fun email! We miss you and your family, too. Can’t wait for the full report on the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival. I just want to thank Cherish Bound again for being a sponsor of the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival this year and providing me the opportunity to experience their company and sending my friend and her family to the Festival.

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Reading Rainbow left the air August 28, 2009

Reading Rainbow left the air August 28, 2009

I’m devastated to learn that Reading Rainbow is leaving PBS because there’s no funding to renew the show’s broadcasting rights. (It is several hundred thousand dollars.) I loved watching LeVar Burton bring a book to life. I was excited to go to the library and find the books mentioned by the kids at the end of each episode. I wanted to know how to read so that I could be transported into the world of a book. In my opinion, Reading Rainbow is excellent literacy-promoting programming.

While I’m devastated Reading Rainbow will no longer be on television, I’m appalled at the underlying message for cutting the funding to this beloved program. It goes back to a shift in philosophy during the Bush administration with pressure from the Department of Education to see more of a focus on phonics and spelling. According to NPR’s report on the cancellation of the show,

Linda Simensky, vice president for children’s programming at PBS, says that when Reading Rainbow was developed in the early 1980s, it was an era when the question was: “How do we get kids to read books?”

Since then, she explains, research has shown that teaching the mechanics of reading should be the network’s priority.

“We’ve been able to identify the earliest steps that we need to take,” Simensky says. “Now we know what we need to do first. Even just from five years ago, I think we all know so much more about how to use television to teach.”

Research has directed programming toward phonics and reading fundamentals as the front line of the literacy fight. Reading Rainbow occupied a more luxurious spacethe show operated on the assumption that kids already had basic reading skills and instead focused on fostering a love of books.

Is your gut churning in turmoil as mine did when I first read this? “I think we all know so much more about how to use television to teach[?]” “Research has shown that teaching the mechanics of reading should be the network’s priority.” {Gasp} I’d love to sit down with Ms. Linda Simensky and go over the following with her!

Emergent literacy is defined as the set of skills children need to have before they can learn to read. In every list I’ve seen on the six emergent literacy skills, the very first skill on the list is Print Motivation. Print motivation means thinking that books and reading are pleasant. I don’t think that children need to have basic reading skills before they foster a love of reading books. They need to grow together.

All six skills need to be addressed: print motivation, print awareness, letter knowledge, vocabulary, phonological awareness, and narrative skills. Without a balanced set of skills, children will not excel when they are formally taught to read and write. The programming geared toward teaching phonics and letter recognition can work in cooperation with programs like Reading Rainbow that create pleasant feelings associated with reading. However, making reading exciting, worthwhile, and enjoyable is, in my opinion, far more important in establishing a habit of reading than teaching phonics.

According to the executive summary “To Read or Not To Read: A Question of National Consequence” from the National Endowment for the Arts (published Nov. 2007), reading for pleasure correlates strongly with academic achievement. Most notably with this finding is that voluntary readers are better readers and writers than non-readers. Not all people who have been taught the mechanics of reading will be voluntary readers. They also need to develop a love of reading. Shows like Reading Rainbow did just that. John Grant, who is in charge of content at WNED Buffalo, Reading Rainbow‘s home station had it right when he said,

Reading Rainbow taught kids why to read,” Grant says. “You know, the love of reading — [the show] encouraged kids to pick up a book and to read.”

Here are some of the findings reported by the National Endowment for the Arts regarding the implications of the decline in reading.

  1. Employees now rank reading and writing as the top deficiencies in new hires.
  2. Good readers generally have more financially rewarding jobs.
  3. Less advanced readers report fewer opportunities for career growth.
  4. Good readers play a crucial role in enriching our cultural and civic life.
  5. Good readers make good citizens.
  6. Deficient readers are far more likely than skilled readers to be high school dropouts.
  7. Deficient readers are more likely than skilled readers to be out of the workforce.
  8. Poor reading skills are endemic in the prison population.

We can teach children how to read. We can drill mechanics into them through 13 years of public education, and even additional years in college. But findings show that if these students are not reading for enjoyment outside of assigned reading, they stop reading once they leave school and their reading skills actually deteriorate. They can move from the enriching, rewarding life of a skilled reader to the out of the workforce, prison population of the deficient reader.

I’d rather spend several hundred thousand dollars on Reading Rainbow‘s broadcast rights than on building more prisons to hold all the deficient readers!

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Today’s post on literacy comes from Colleen Felz, the Homeschooling Coach. Find her homeschooling tips & curriculum ideas as well as stories about the joys & trials of home education at her blog, Homeschooling Coach. In her sister blog, Living as a mom, read stories about her life as a Christian wife and mother. Here are her thoughts on literacy…and beyond.

Becoming a literate person is a big undertaking, and the early years are the time to lay a firm foundation. Throughout this series on emergent literacy you have read about some specific skills needed to read and write well and learned that it takes lots of practice to master those skills. In this post I’d like to sum it all up.

The most important thing that you can do to help your child learn to read and write is to simply reading good literature to your child from birth through the teen years. There is so much that you share with your child during those special times spent reading together. Your oral reading helps your child hear the rhythm of the language and the intonation used in reading. You also serve as a model for what expert readers do and how they solve problems when they read. Since your child naturally wants to mimic you in the early years, reading aloud is a great time to inadvertently (or even intentionally) teach your child about reading.

What behaviors are you modeling for your child as an expert reader? Just think of all that you do when you are reading aloud. If you misread a word in a sentence, you correct yourself when you realize that the word did not make sense, and you use the context to figure out the meaning of certain words. You make predictions as you read, too. You even reread excellent books because you get something new from those books each time you read them. The next time you read aloud, think about all that you actually do when you read.

As you model these skills, you can also explicitly share them with your child when you read aloud to him/her. When you and your little one snuggle together and read, talk about the book and ask questions.

“Those words rhyme.”

“I love this author (book).”

“I wonder what will happen next.”

“Have you ever felt like that?”

I cannot stress enough how important it is to read to your child . The time you invest in reading aloud to your child is time well spent. Enjoy it!

What are some of your favorite books to read with your little ones?

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