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    All About Teaching and Learning Phonics

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved English
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    • S Offline
      starz
      last edited by

      hi tamarind,


      my girl is reading level 4b right now. I find its too easy for her age 4 yrs old. cos i was so busy that we delay almost a yr to restart P&J again. its like overdue. shall i skip to the next level? but which level is recommended? also issit a must to buy both book A and B?

      else what is the most basic n easy simple chapter books to start off with? i dun wish to bore her with chapter books, just want to lightly introduce to her.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • C Offline
        cherrygal
        last edited by

        The topic is very helpful.


        If I buy the Leapfrog DVD from amazon.com, can I watch it with a normal DVD player? Sorry to ask this. I seem to have seen this question asked somewhere but now cannot locate the answer.

        My son learnt reading at 4yrs from Zoophonics (1 year). I sent him to Zoophonics as he was resistant to reading books by himself. After he was confident in reading, I took him out of Zoophonics. He's now 6 and can read Enid Blyton books, newspapers and ingredients from food packages. So which level should I start my son on with Ladybird series? He will enter P1 next year.

        I now intend to use Tamarind's method to teach my daughter when she reaches 2+ and also to help motivate my son to read more extensively. I will also tell my son tonight that he can have ice cream at swensens if he finishes more books. Great idea!

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • B Offline
          buds
          last edited by

          laughingcat:
          Hello experts :rahrah: I do have a query and hopefully can get some expert view and suggestion. :salute:

          Hi, laughingcat. šŸ˜‰

          Received your PM with regards to the query below.
          Apologise for the delay as i've been rather occupied.
          I am NO expert but i will try my best to guide you where
          i can, okie? šŸ˜„
          laughingcat:
          All along I have been teaching my boy the short vowel first. Now that I need to move to teaching long vowel because of some advanced blending.
          Yes, i suppose you are on the right track, dear.

          Beginners to Phonics will begin from learning the sounds of
          letters first (single letter sounds)... move on to wordbuilding
          (listening to sounds in words :eg. t...i...n...) then to 3-letter
          phonetic words family blending (eg. am, an, at ag, etc)...
          followed by double consonant blends (bl, cl, fl, sp (etc)...
          triple consonant blends (eg. spr, spl, etc)...

          After which, children can move on to other combination
          sounds, long vowels & special letter combinations & so on.

          An effective phonics programme must be supplemented with
          books or readers. Phonics should not only serve the purpose
          of decoding words or learning how to spell, but also not forgetting
          the whole intention of assisting the child with fluency in reading and
          reading effectively. Children should progress from learning to read
          short simple words to short sentences and move on to longer words
          and longer sentences. The inclusion of sight words will be extremely
          helpful in helping children to make sense of sentences in words, as
          complete sentences will be made up of both phonetic and sight words.
          laughingcat:
          Can anyone advise me how do I go about teaching long vowels in order to avoid confusion? :?
          You should ensure that you gao tim the blends first prior to introducing the
          long vowels. There are blends that do not have long vowels in them like in
          the words bl-ack... bl-and... and also in words like spr-ing... spl-en-did. Try
          to avoid words like bl-oo-per-s... and br-oo-m... or scr-ee-ch... for starters.

          Once you're assured that your child understands the blends, i can guide you
          further with the long vowels. As usual, you're always welcome to PM me your
          doubts. Will try the best i can, k.. with whatever time i have here.

          Regards, buds. šŸ˜‰

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • H Offline
            hquek
            last edited by

            cherrygal:
            The topic is very helpful.


            If I buy the Leapfrog DVD from amazon.com, can I watch it with a normal DVD player? Sorry to ask this. I seem to have seen this question asked somewhere but now cannot locate the answer.
            Hi cherrygal,

            You can actually borrow the leadpad frog dvds from local library - normal members (ie don't pay money type) can borrow 2 discs.

            And if you buy from amazon, as long as your dvd player can read the region the dvd is under, no issues.

            if you have a region-compatibility issue, no worries. Just google and there will be someplace that teaches how to change the region code of the dvd player. For all machines, there is a chain of buttons to press that will enable to make the machine multi-region.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • B Offline
              buds
              last edited by

              It is usually easiest if one has the multi-coded DVD player.

              The one i recently sold off couldn't be played on desktop,
              laptop or netbook but could play automatically on our DVD.
              No fuss for region code changes and such. šŸ˜„

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • C Offline
                cherrygal
                last edited by

                hquek:


                Hi cherrygal,

                You can actually borrow the leadpad frog dvds from local library - normal members (ie don't pay money type) can borrow 2 discs.

                And if you buy from amazon, as long as your dvd player can read the region the dvd is under, no issues.

                if you have a region-compatibility issue, no worries. Just google and there will be someplace that teaches how to change the region code of the dvd player. For all machines, there is a chain of buttons to press that will enable to make the machine multi-region.
                Thanks hquek and Buds for your advice! I just ordered mine via Amazon and it should arrive in Sep. Hopefully I will have no problems watching. I bought the 3xDVD set with flash cards (US$24.95 before shipping). Tot it would be a good investment since we are supposed to show to the kid everyday or so.

                This website is really making me kiasu man... šŸ˜‰

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                • laughingcatL Offline
                  laughingcat
                  last edited by

                  HELLO Buds :rahrah: Thanks so much for the advise. I really need it ...hehehehe :lol:


                  Your advise came in just in time. As I have finished with the initial consonant blends and that is when I felt stuck :whut:

                  Okie....shall try out the triple consonant blends. I was thinking of skipping this actually and just go straight into long vowels. heheheh seems like I can't take the short cut way. šŸ‘…

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • T Offline
                    tamarind
                    last edited by

                    starz:
                    hi tamarind,


                    my girl is reading level 4b right now. I find its too easy for her age 4 yrs old. cos i was so busy that we delay almost a yr to restart P&J again. its like overdue. shall i skip to the next level? but which level is recommended? also issit a must to buy both book A and B?

                    else what is the most basic n easy simple chapter books to start off with? i dun wish to bore her with chapter books, just want to lightly introduce to her.
                    Hi starz,
                    It is not necessary to buy the \"b\" series if your girl can read most of the words in \"a\" without any help.

                    Check out this page from my blog :

                    http://tamarindphonics.blogspot.com/2010/03/picture-books-from-my-home-library.html

                    I listed many books suitable for reading level 4.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • T Offline
                      tamarind
                      last edited by

                      buds:

                      An effective phonics programme must be supplemented with
                      books or readers. Phonics should not only serve the purpose
                      of decoding words or learning how to spell, but also not forgetting
                      the whole intention of assisting the child with fluency in reading and
                      reading effectively. Children should progress from learning to read
                      short simple words to short sentences and move on to longer words
                      and longer sentences. The inclusion of sight words will be extremely
                      helpful in helping children to make sense of sentences in words, as
                      complete sentences will be made up of both phonetic and sight words.
                      Hi buds,
                      I totally agree with you.

                      In my blog, I have always advised parents that they must teach both phonics and sight words (using the Peter and Jane series or other books).
                      šŸ˜‰

                      For my boy, I started him on the Peter and Jane book 1 after I taught him how to join 3 letters to form words. The results are amazing.

                      He will be 6 years old next month, and now he is reading Charlotte's Web. He reads very fluently, and he knows most of the words, I rarely need to help him. I remember struggling when I had to read Charlotte's Web at Sec 1. My boy is only of average learning ability and he used to have a very short attention span. I believe that if we use the correct methods, all kids of average and above abilities can be taught to read amazingly well by the age of 6.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • laughingcatL Offline
                        laughingcat
                        last edited by

                        tamarind:

                        He will be 6 years old next month, and now he is reading Charlotte's Web. He reads very fluently, and he knows most of the words, I rarely need to help him.
                        Hello Tamarind,

                        Was wondering whether can you share your experiences in getting active boy to read. At the start, do you face any difficulty getting your boy to read books other than P&J? Also can you share what are your encounters when you tell your boy to read such a \"thick\" book? I was thinking how I can counter such fear should my boy be in that stage. šŸ™

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