L.D. asks from Torrington, CT on January 18, 2009
Your Baby Can Read. Tv
Hi Moms,
I just saw this commercial on tv about a program that you use at home to teach your baby to read. As with any good infomercial, it had several examples showing very young babies and children actually reading words. I was wondering if anyone here has used this program, or can recommend something similar that has worked for them? It looked too amazing and I am interested in trying something like that with my 16 month old. I don't have the $200+ to buy the package and wonder what/if there is anything particularly special in this program that makes it successful that we can't just do at home anyway without paying this much. Any thoughts or experiences?
Thanks ladies!
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So What Happened?™
Well, I have to say I am a bit surprised at the responses here. I suppose my request was badly worded as it made so many responders assume we aren't reading books to the child all the time anyway. Or that we intednded to not expose the child to a variety of stimulation so they can grow and develop healthy and active. The commercial just showed babies responding to written language at such a young age it was fascinating to me and I wondered if anyone had used it or anything similar. Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts.
Featured Answers
H.S. answers from Boston on January 19, 2009
My friend bought it for her son and she swears by it. I was thinking of buying but i am just waiting to recover from the holidays.
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C.R. answers from Boston on January 19, 2009
Don't get seduced by these programs that teach your children to read. First of all, it's not good for your infants or young children to be watching tv or using computers. Studies have shown that this interferes with, not helps their development. Read to your child, sing songs, talk to your child, respond to your babies noises and sounds (this is their pre language), allow your child to play and encourage use of toys that allow creativity and imaginary play. Stay away from toys that are battery operated and do everything for your child, instead provide toys that they can manipulate and use in their own way. Your child will learn how to read and write, etc; there is no rush and you will notice that these skills develop sooner if you stay away from the junk out there that pushes kids before they are ready.
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S.C. answers from Boston on January 19, 2009
As an education professional, I just wanted to make a comment about early readers. There are some children--a small percentage--who are truly extraordinary and can learn to read at a young age--before about 4 1/2 or 5. However, most children who are reading before that are pushed into it by their parents. By and large, many good studies have shown, that these children who are pushed to read early actually develop a dislike of reading after a few years. For some reason (still being researched) waiting until the child's brain is more developed before they learn to read, is much better to developing a life long love of reading.
Just something to keep in mind when looking into this type of product.
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H.S. answers from Boston on January 19, 2009
My friend bought it for her son and she swears by it. I was thinking of buying but i am just waiting to recover from the holidays.
1 mom found this helpful
A.G. answers from Lewiston on January 19, 2009
I myelf learned to read in Kindergarten. I remember reading a book called "miffy" I didn't have that. I have a 5 year old daughter who is in Kindergarten and she is reading very well. She has been read to EVERYDAY of her life. we spell out the letters on stop signs, cereal boxes etc.. like someone below says. I say take the $200 and buy her some sturdy board books like "Goodnight Moon" and some other books like"Llama Llama Red Pajamas". Also talk with her about what you are maiking for dinner ..."I am peeling potatoes, to boil, to make mashed potatoes for dinner"
Explain what you do while you bathe her. reading little books with single words is also good Both my children love those. I also have a three year old son who already know when his book is upside down and/or backwards. He can point at the word and tell you they are "c's" as in "abc's".
Both of them love "Chicka Chicka ABC" or "Chicka Chick Boom Boom" The 1st uses lowercase letters and the 2nd uses the Uppercase letters withe the same rhyme. Spending time with your child does more for her than anything she can watch on TV. It builds self-esteem, self-confidence, and self-worth. She will never doubt that you think she is worth it, or that you love her. I'm not a teacher or a child phychatirst(sp) I'm just a Mom who was once a kid, Who tries to give her own kids things I never had...Most importantly time with a good storybook. Good Luck with what evr you choose to do :)
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T.S. answers from Boston on January 19, 2009
The other thing to remember is there are more important things for your child to learn at 16 months than how to read. Children who are drilled on flash cards at an early age often are awkward socially later because now is the time she should be learning the give and take of conversation, how to share, how to play with another human being interactively. It's so much more important for young toddlers to play and have as many enriching experiences as possible so she can learn to interact with the world around her and the people in it.
Trust me, she'll learn how to read eventually, there is no need to push her now. Better to read to her and start teaching her how to sit through a story and listen.
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C.D. answers from Portland on January 19, 2009
Hi,
First of all, I don't see that you aren't doing all that you should be doing with your child. I see alot of negative feedback about this program...first of all, if anyone has watched it you will see that it isn't something you tie the children up to do, they make it fun and what is the big deal about learning something new if it's made to be fun. It's not a program that is forced upon the children from what I can see. I actually just ordered the program about a week ago and I will let you know how it goes. I just see it as one more avenue to teach our little children new things...they are such little sponges, why not take advantage while they are young? Why not make reading something that isn't "hard"...oh and whoever brought up using phonics, if you look into the program they do have other steps after this first program that include phonics. I do agree that it is pricey, my mother in law bought it for our son, but I will let you know after I have tried it. It's certainly not going to hurt him any!!!
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R.S. answers from Providence on January 20, 2009
I don't know about the video you mentioned, but its sounds a bit pricey. There is a book called teach your child to read in 100 easy lessons. This book is fantastic. It for preschool through second graders. My son loves this book & its not too expensive. Another great thing is the leap frog videos. Letter factory is the first one & it's how my son learned all of his sounds. Naturally we all read to our children, but if they're watching television, why not have them be learning too.
M.D. answers from Burlington on January 23, 2009
Hi L.,
Lucky you that you can try this out. I saw a man on a news magazine show recently. I can't remember which one. Maybe it was the Today Show. His children used the learn to read program at an early age and they are able to read at a fast speed and have amazing retention. He said that if he stopped working and read everyday, he'd never be able to catch up to them in the number of books they've read. The program matched words, spoken and written, with pictures so that each was associated with each other. I assume you can show letters of the alphabet and speak the names of the letters and the sounds they make.
Life is learning. Infants are learning as they watch and listen. I see no problem with teaching as long as demanding results from a child on the parents' desired schedule does not happen.
Good luck,
M.
Good luck,
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