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    All About Teaching and Learning Phonics

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

      Hi pea,

      Yes it is fine to use the "b" books if you cannot find the "a" books.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • P Offline
        pea
        last edited by

        Tamarind,


        :thankyou:

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        • T Offline
          tamarind
          last edited by

          pea,

          You are welcome πŸ˜„

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          • C Offline
            CMF
            last edited by

            Hi all


            Just to share that this site is a good reference for reading lists for each age group http://www.kidsreads.com/lists/pic-classic.asp

            Also, the following http://www.navrang.com/?Page=Main has many book sets, especially for Enid Blyton series. Worldwide shipping is free for purchases above US$50/- and for purchases below that amount it's a flat fee of US$4.99.

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            • T Offline
              tamarind
              last edited by

              Dear all,

              I would like to share the little stories written by my daughter, now 6 years old :

              http://tamarindphonics.blogspot.com/2009/02/written-by-chloe.html

              I actually have not spent time teaching her how to write. I only make sure that she knows phonics very well, and that she reads consistently everyday. She has been reading many of the wonderful children's classics, like Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Little House on the Prairie, etc.

              A child who reads very well, naturally knows how to write.

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              • C Offline
                Charmaine_chong
                last edited by

                Hi Tamarind,


                Wow, Is awesome!

                May i check with you words blending with letter "L" ? L says "O" in Leapfrog.

                When come to words, eg: lap, lag, how do i sound them out?

                Should i say "O"- ap" or "Le"- ap"? If i say O-ap, seems doesn’t blend.

                Appreciate your guidance.

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                • T Offline
                  tamarind
                  last edited by

                  Hi Charmaine,

                  Thanks for your compliments πŸ™‚

                  L actually is not \"O\" in Leapfrog, it is actually sounds like \"uLLL\". There is an \"L\" sound at the end which may not be very clear in video.
                  Click on the following webpage, it is exactly the same as leapfrog. Try to listen to eat a few times.
                  http://www.starfall.com/n/level-k/letter-l/load.htm?f

                  Try to read the word \"LOT\", drag out the beginning part, you find that you are saying \"uLLL\" - \"OT\". Not \"ler\" - \"OT\". That's why \"L\" is not taught as \"ler\", it should be \"uLLL\".



                  Also read this comment about the Leapfrog Letter Factory :
                  http://www.amazon.com/review/R1AV62IULFTHNI/ref=cm_cr_pr_viewpnt#R1AV62IULFTHNI
                  The letter sounds for L and R are not \"completely wrong.\" They are actually completely right. I am a first grade teacher and it is a common mistake for parents to teach their children that L says \"Luh\" and R says \"Ruh.\" \"ul\"isten to yourself when you say a word beginning with L. Listen well. ul-isten. See? Now try it the way you think it should be. Luh. Luh-isten. It doesn't flow that way. L is not supposed to be taught with the extra vowel sound behind it. It teaches children to chop their words up. Learning it correctly... \"ulll\" teaches them how to continually flow through the word without chopping it up. Same thing with the R. Listen to yourself saying a word that begins with R. Try \"Read\". \"er\"ead or \"ruh\"ead.

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                  • M Offline
                    MadMum
                    last edited by

                    tamarind:
                    Dear all,

                    I would like to share the little stories written by my daughter, now 6 years old :

                    http://tamarindphonics.blogspot.com/2009/02/written-by-chloe.html

                    I actually have not spent time teaching her how to write. I only make sure that she knows phonics very well, and that she reads consistently everyday. She has been reading many of the wonderful children's classics, like Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Little House on the Prairie, etc.

                    A child who reads very well, naturally knows how to write.
                    :salute:
                    I'm so impressed. She writes and draws so well. Congratulations. You must be really proud of her. How did you teach her to write ? My daughter's 5 and a half, and she can barely read !

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

                      MadMum:
                      tamarind:

                      Dear all,

                      I would like to share the little stories written by my daughter, now 6 years old :

                      http://tamarindphonics.blogspot.com/2009/02/written-by-chloe.html

                      I actually have not spent time teaching her how to write. I only make sure that she knows phonics very well, and that she reads consistently everyday. She has been reading many of the wonderful children's classics, like Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Little House on the Prairie, etc.

                      A child who reads very well, naturally knows how to write.

                      :salute:
                      I'm so impressed. She writes and draws so well. Congratulations. You must be really proud of her. How did you teach her to write ? My daughter's 5 and a half, and she can barely read !

                      Thanks for your compliments πŸ™‚

                      My efforts are only concentrated on teaching her phonics, and reading using the Ladybird Peter and Jane series. She spells most of the words using phonics techniques, and some words from memory. Since she has been reading consistently everyday, she knows the high frequency words very well. After she finished reading the Peter and Jane series book 12a and 12b, I let her read a wide variety of books. I make sure that she reads at least a few pages (about 200 words a page) everyday, even during school holidays.

                      I almost never ask her to practice writing. And I don't have time to teach her to write stories. I guess because I strictly limit the amount of TV she watches, so when she has nothing to do, she thinks of stories to write and draw. I only discover her stories after I return home from work. I guess since she has read so much, when she wants to express an idea, she naturally knows how to write the words.

                      I believe that parents should concentrate their efforts in teaching a child to read very well first.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • S Offline
                        sleepy
                        last edited by

                        tamarind:
                        Dear all,

                        I would like to share the little stories written by my daughter, now 6 years old :

                        http://tamarindphonics.blogspot.com/2009/02/written-by-chloe.html

                        I actually have not spent time teaching her how to write. I only make sure that she knows phonics very well, and that she reads consistently everyday. She has been reading many of the wonderful children's classics, like Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Little House on the Prairie, etc.

                        A child who reads very well, naturally knows how to write.

                        Your dd is amazing !!!

                        Mine is an avid reader but no output in terms of writing. Painstakingly teaching her how to compose stories. Tough

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