Reading at Home with Your Child

Help! How do I get my child to read with me?

It’s pretty natural for parents to ask teachers about how to help their child with reading. The question might come in different forms, sometimes like this… “Hi, I’m Akoniʻs mom. He’s loving third grade. Hey, I’ve been meaning to ask you about his reading. What can we be doing at home to help him improve?” OR sometimes like this… “Hi, I’m Akoniʻs mom. He’s loving third grade. But doggone it, every time I try to help him with his reading, we end up in a fight. Any tips?”

First you are amazing and have already put the right foot forward by wanting to read with your child, which means you probably have been doing this very thing all along. Itʻs hard to know when to let them read independently and when to find that time to share together in the reading. Reading can still be a bonding experience, as it once was when they were sitting on your lap as a wee tot mesmerized by all those pictures. That is where the LOVE of reading begins and we want to continue on that journey but also continue with the supportive-growth experience.

Letʻs have a look at some ways we can continue to support our keiki in their journey as life-long readers…

Changing Mindset

Try approaching reading with your child as a fellow reader, not as a parent. When you view the experience as equals… just two readers with the same book, your child feels less judged, his thinking more valued. Bring your reading experience to the table by modeling your reading voice and sharing your honest thinking about the text, rather than trying to instruct your child on how to do something, you can keep the interactions positive and productive, and you will see reading growth as a byproduct.

Be Careful with the Corrections… and the Compliments

Correcting all mistakes and misinterpretations leads to your child getting frustrated, then you getting frustrated, then your child getting attitude, then you getting snarky, then your child shutting down. Sound familiar?

Compliments are great! However, too much “Good job!” or “That was perfect!” and subconsciously you begin sounding like, “I’m better at this than you, so I’ll judge your performance.” Support him with “reader-to-reader” compliments and observations, rather than “expert-to-novice” ones. Here’s an example of a compliment from a fellow reader: “I like to stop and reread, too. It helps make sure the story sounds just right.” Or, “When you explained what the character meant right there, I was thinking the same thing. How cool is that?!” Think of it this way: if you wouldn’t say it to a friend in your own book club, avoid those words with your child.

Choose a Variety of Texts

Picture books lend themselves nicely to reading together because you and your child can read an entire book in one sitting. Upper elementary children tend to think picture books are “only for little kids,” but authors like Patricia Polacco, Eve Bunting, William Steig, and Chris Van Allsburg, would beg to differ.

And if you can get your child to buy into a picture book here and there, you might go out on a limb once in a while and pull out a favorite from your child’s younger days. Frog and Toad, Henry and Mudge, Olivia… Since reading the actual words of an old favorite is easy, you can dig deep into themes and underlying messages.

Chapter books are probably the most natural choice, especially for upper elementary. Try choosing one separate from the books he reads on his own, one that is “reserved” for just the two of you. That way, you both are always on the same page with the story, both literally and figuratively.

Other short texts can also be appealing to read together: magazine articles, poems, kid-appropriate community-related Facebook posts. I love Humans of New York! What a great talking piece.

Take Turns 

Agree on how to share the reading. Not sure where to start? Try this: you read one page out loud, then your child reads the next page out loud, and you continue taking turns. Make sure you are sitting next to your child so both readers are looking at the words being read.

When you are listening to your child read, be sure you are really trying to understand the story yourself, not just assessing your child’s performance. Help him with difficult words, nudging him to give it a shot first before you make a suggestion. Help him with new vocabulary he comes across.

When you are reading, try to model strong reading fluency. Don’t read fast. Rather, read with clear phrasing and expression. Pause once or twice to talk about something from the text.

Think Out Loud

Verbalizing your thinking, in detail, is huge. When you think out loud, your child hears the kinds of things a strong reader thinks about when she reads. It can take some getting used to, because much of what adult readers internalize happens so naturally, but testing these things out for your child to hear is valuable. For example: “Do you see what I did there? Man, I really goofed that sentence up, but I didn’t realize it until I got to this comma. So I decided to just go back and read the whole sentence again.” Or, “This part reminds me of that time when you and I went fishing. Remember how frustrated we were?” Or, “I think I know why the author said that phrase right there. He’s trying to trick us, don’t you think?”

Encourage Predictions, Stances, References, Feelings

Look for opportunities to pause in the text to discuss whatʻs happening. A few timely exchanges throughout makes for a more meaningful post-discussion. Through modeling and prompting questions (in a “I truly want to know what you think” sort of tone), encourage your child to make predictions, take a stance and form opinions on issues, refer to parts of the text that support his thinking, and share how certain sections or phrases make him feel.

After the reading, you could try something like: “I’m proud of you for working on that (or) thinking so hard about that (or) sharing your thoughts about that (or) taking a stand on that (or) being honest with how you feel about that. Aren’t you proud of me, too?” You might get a minor eye-roll, but a smile will probably accompany it.

To Write or Not to Write

Literature responses have their place but unless your child really enjoys writing down his thoughts about a book, there isnʻt a need to push him to do it. We know writing-about-your-reading is important and something we do all the time in class but at this time focus on discussing ideas out loud because being able to understand and analyze a text, explain and support one’s own thinking, and listen to, build on, or disagree with someone else’s thinking, all verbally is an extremely important skill to have.

Spill Conversations Over

Carry your conversations into other parts of the evening. Time isnʻt on our side but we can talk about a book in the car, while setting the table for dinner, during dinner, or during the bedtime routine, which can help curb the feeling that you’re just adding one more thing to an already crowded night.

Happy Reading!

Blog post adapted by Michelle Young

Original Blog: http://www.thethinkerbuilder.com/2015/08/show-parents-how-to-read-with-their.html

Hereʻs a great bookmark to support reading at home!

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5ePvBTfGoXfbEd5NzBUdWFJQ0U/view

 

 

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