M.P. asks from Elmhurst, IL on February 28, 2010
Reading Help for First Grader
My son is 7 and in the first grade. We live in Elmhurst and he does get reading help at school. I was thinking of getting him help outside of school as well as putting in some programs over the summer. He has a fit when we sit down to read, but once we get into it I can tell he enjoys it. I think he is just self-conscious of his slowness. Let me know if you have any ideas or any good programs you know about. I am excited for him to get past his current reading hurdles because I know once he is confidant in his reading he will absolutely love to read and learn new things.
M. P
SAH Mom of a 7 year old boy and 3 year old girl.
Featured Answers
K.W. answers from Chicago on March 01, 2010
My son struggled a lot in the beginning. It was hard for us because it seemed like everyone we knew had kids reading at older levels. I have read suggestions on different things on here.
One mom suggested the library. That is great I believe because they have so many FREE programs that rock. We have tons of books at home but every other week we go to the library and I allow my 3 kids (7, 4 and 2) to pick out their own books. My son (7 yrs, 1st grade) would pick out easy books but once I noticed they were getting too easy I suggested harder books and praised him on his progress.
Sight words are a must, if he isn't great at those Walmart has some inexpensive flash cards that were awesome for my son. Also one mom suggested the Starfall website, that is FREE too and an awesome outlet, my kids honestly think it is just for playing.
You might offer to let him read one page you read another page. This way he doesn't get overwhelmed by the length. I have also re-read the book to my son afterward too. The biggest thing I think for you is to keep him excited about reading. Read street signs, magazines, whatever it takes. You may have a grandparent, cousin or family member send him postcards...
I think that although you want him to read books, etc know that just taking small steps can be so rewarding for him.
Either way you are not alone mom...I have been dealing with the same struggle :) Good Luck!
K.
More Answers
A.T. answers from Portland on February 28, 2010
As someone who had & has a learning disability, I would have him evaluated by a neuropsychologist or someone else qualified to make sure that that isn't the case. I wish mine had been evaluated early on, school would have been much easier & I see kids all the time that I can tell have learning disabilities that are just overlooked. A great neuropsycholoist is Dr. Lange ###-###-####. But just an idea.
1 mom found this helpful
E.M. answers from Chicago on March 01, 2010
If you are looking for professional help for your son: http://gail.trieger.org
Good luck!
C.S. answers from Charlotte on February 28, 2010
Have him read to the three year old. She won't know if he messes up and it may help with his confidence that his sister's enjoying the story.
D.S. answers from Tulsa on February 28, 2010
if you can afford it sylavins learning center. if necessary. I taught mine to break down words when possible like blackout. or doghouse. its not as scary and he read by the time he started kindergarten.
N.P. answers from Chicago on March 01, 2010
If my child was needing extra help in school I would do the Kumon learning centers. I really like their methods from a teacher/educational stand point. They build on skills in a logical way not a traditional method.
J.D. answers from Chicago on March 01, 2010
interesting article that may help:
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/freedom-learn/201002/...
G.R. answers from Peoria on February 28, 2010
Hooked on Phonics is a great reading program. Also have you considered getting him involved in a summer reading program at your local library? Pizza Hut's "Book It!" program is a fun incentive too.
R.J. answers from San Diego on February 28, 2010
www.starfall.com
LD testing
Charlotte Mason "Narration" the following cut and paste from
http://simplycharlottemason.com/basics/started/charlotte-...
Narration
When you ask a child to narrate, you’re asking him to tell back in his own words what he just saw, heard, or read. The narration can be oral or written or drawn — whatever. Because the child must think through the information and determine how to present it, mixed with his own opinion and impressions, this method of evaluation requires a much higher thinking level than mere fill-in-the-blank or answer-the-posed-question-with-a-fact methods. When requesting a child to narrate, word the question in an open, essay-type form, such as “Tell all you know about _____” or “Describe _____.” (See more ideas for narration.)
If a book you’re using gives a list of Discussion Questions, first ask the child to tell you all he knows about what was just read, then use only selected questions to cover any information he omitted.
for more on narration check out http://simplycharlottemason.com/timesavers/narration/
Email