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    Teaching Chinese at Home

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Chinese
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    • T Offline
      tamarind
      last edited by

      Parents should try to read this page from the Si Wu Kuai Du series before they buy the books.

      http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_w1nyHWTEh94/SzQMM0_2kGI/AAAAAAAABas/fiu6YIcA5gk/s1600-h/b2.JPG

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      • T Offline
        tamarind
        last edited by

        phankao:
        tamarind:

        [quote=\"phankao\"]
        My boy likes chinese classic stories better. And stories with human interest.

        Then the choices will be very limited. There are very few Chinese classics.
        If we want our kids to be good in Chinese, they must read large number of books. Reading just a few books are not good enough.

        Ok, I took out some of the books he has been reading. I didn't take the ones in his schoolbag, and i think there are some more hiding in the shelves.
        http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5286/5352043864_8c2d7be52a.jpg\">
        No, they are not recommended for most children. Just that my boy seems to have an affinity to these types of stories even though we are a very English-speaking family since my hubs can't speak/read Chinese and I did poorly in chinese and even failed my oral.

        Anyway, out of no influence from us, Chinese storybooks were the first books he could read at 4years old. He couldn't read english on entering pri 1, no matter how we tried to teach. ;(

        And in pri 1, he asked me for money for bookfair in school, and these are the books he buys, much to my surprise(?!) - i found these in the bookshelves this evening - very nostalgic.
        http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5129/5352044214_f6ac74d8e3.jpg\">

        Yeah, I try to introduce other types of stories, but well, that's him.[/quote]I have many of these stories in my home library too. These type of books are easily available from dangdang.com, and I think they have a better variety than any bookshop in Singapore.

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        • phankaoP Offline
          phankao
          last edited by

          tamarind:

          I have many of these stories in my home library too. These type of books are easily available from dangdang.com, and I think they have a better variety than any bookshop in Singapore.
          Yeah, of course dangdang.com would have them. I don't find in bookstores here too, but am happy that the 2nd-hand bookstall tends to have, and the books would cost like S$2 each.

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          • S Offline
            smurf
            last edited by

            I bought siwukuaidu today! At $50, 7 books. šŸ™‚

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            • phankaoP Offline
              phankao
              last edited by

              smurf:
              I bought siwukuaidu today! At $50, 7 books. šŸ™‚

              Huh? I saw the Sgshinekids website selling at only S$41, leh.

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              • phankaoP Offline
                phankao
                last edited by

                tamarind:
                Parents should try to read this page from the Si Wu Kuai Du series before they buy the books.

                http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_w1nyHWTEh94/SzQMM0_2kGI/AAAAAAAABas/fiu6YIcA5gk/s1600-h/b2.JPG
                Ok, my chinese is really bad, so i might understand this wrongly. I read through the above. I know about 70% of the words only I'm afraid. Does it just say that parents have to set aside time to go through the books systematically regularly and revise at least 7 to 8 times frequently for memory of the characters to be assimilated?

                Are the words in the siwukuaidu very difficult that those of us who are poor in Chinese won't be able to manage?

                So far, what I summarised about is what I've been doing with my 2yo since he showed recognition of chinese (and english) words at 10mths old. Altho' not using that series, lah. Actually, my chinese improved in the process. However, I must say that for the 2yo, the characters set in his head, but I still need to check my online dictionary for the more difficult words! But yes, must go through the frequently. What is not seen regularly gets forgotten after a long time of absence, so i do tend to be rather vigilant for Chinese reading. For English, he discovered how to read phonetically by himself, so that's the main difference with Chinese - he can read and not exactly \"forget\", like for Chinese characters.

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                • T Offline
                  tamarind
                  last edited by

                  phankao:
                  tamarind:


                  I have many of these stories in my home library too. These type of books are easily available from dangdang.com, and I think they have a better variety than any bookshop in Singapore.

                  Yeah, of course dangdang.com would have them. I don't find in bookstores here too, but am happy that the 2nd-hand bookstall tends to have, and the books would cost like S$2 each.

                  dangdang.com also has a much wider selection than any second hand bookshops in Singapore šŸ˜‰

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                  • T Offline
                    tamarind
                    last edited by

                    phankao:
                    tamarind:

                    Parents should try to read this page from the Si Wu Kuai Du series before they buy the books.

                    http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_w1nyHWTEh94/SzQMM0_2kGI/AAAAAAAABas/fiu6YIcA5gk/s1600-h/b2.JPG

                    Ok, my chinese is really bad, so i might understand this wrongly. I read through the above. I know about 70% of the words only I'm afraid. Does it just say that parents have to set aside time to go through the books systematically regularly and revise at least 7 to 8 times frequently for memory of the characters to be assimilated?

                    Are the words in the siwukuaidu very difficult that those of us who are poor in Chinese won't be able to manage?

                    So far, what I summarised about is what I've been doing with my 2yo since he showed recognition of chinese (and english) words at 10mths old. Altho' not using that series, lah. Actually, my chinese improved in the process. However, I must say that for the 2yo, the characters set in his head, but I still need to check my online dictionary for the more difficult words! But yes, must go through the frequently. What is not seen regularly gets forgotten after a long time of absence, so i do tend to be rather vigilant for Chinese reading. For English, he discovered how to read phonetically by himself, so that's the main difference with Chinese - he can read and not exactly \"forget\", like for Chinese characters.

                    Since you are already teaching your child and seeing very good results, then there is no need to use the Si Wu Kuai Du books. If you continue for many more years, your child will be able to read long novels.

                    The Si Wu Kuai Du books are suitable for kids age 4 to 5 years old, by the time they finish book 6, they will be able to read about 80% of the words in the newspapers (assuming they remember every word that they have learned). If parents use the correct methods, most kids should be able to finish the 6 books within 2 years. That is why the words \"Kuai Du\" or \"fast read\". It is excellent for parents like me who have little time to teach my kids.

                    The words that are taught in the Si Wu Kuai Du books are roughly equivalent to our P4/P5 standard. The important thing is not whether parents can read these words or not, but whether parents can fully understand the instructions written in the first 30 pages. The page in my link actually says many more important things than what you have summarized.

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                    • S Offline
                      smurf
                      last edited by

                      Nevermind lah, at least I can read the books now, instead of waiting...and I'm not sure of the source from website...but if I have citibank credit card, I would wanna order from DD. They are cheaper and more variety.


                      Any idea what is the shipping duration? If I order now, when can the books reach me? :?

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                      • dimsumD Offline
                        dimsum
                        last edited by

                        smurf:
                        Nevermind lah, at least I can read the books now, instead of waiting...and I'm not sure of the source from website...but if I have citibank credit card, I would wanna order from DD. They are cheaper and more variety.


                        Any idea what is the shipping duration? If I order now, when can the books reach me? :?
                        around 8 weeks. My end Nov shipment hasn't arrived yet.

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