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Your Kindergartner and Reading

Kindergartners learn reading-readiness skills. They build their vocabulary and learn the relationship of sounds to letters.

By Miriam Myers, GreatSchools Staff
 

In Your Child's Classroom

Reading readiness skills

Throughout the year your kindergartner is being introduced to skills that will prepare him to read.

He is working with the letters of the alphabet, building his vocabulary and beginning to understand that reading is a way to derive meaning from print. He is immersed in a print-rich environment that will help him develop an awareness and understanding of spoken and written language.

Reading specialist Jennifer Thompson explains: "As children use language, they reveal their working knowledge of the rules of language, how to use them, and put words and parts of words together in meaningful ways."

Books and print

Your child is learning how books are read from front cover to back cover, from the top of the page to the bottom of the page, and from left to right. By the end of the year, she will recognize the parts of a book such as the cover, title page and table of contents.

The letter-sound relationship

Your kindergartner is learning the relationship of sounds to letters so that he can decode written words. He should be getting repeated practice working with letters and their sounds, perhaps by sorting picture cards according to their beginning sounds. He practices blending sounds together to make words and breaking words down into separate sounds. He learns the building blocks of words by clapping out the syllables along with the teacher. Kindergartners begin to read easy books to practice the letter-sound relationship they are learning. They learn to recognize frequently used words, such as is and here.

Reading for meaning

Your kindergartner is learning to derive meaning from what is read aloud and what she reads. You can expect her to recognize the sequence of events in a story, and their cause and effect, as well as to anticipate the possible outcome. She learns to retell familiar stories, summarizing the main ideas and plot. She can identify the characters, settings and important events. The class may act out a story with props to show that the children understand the characters and plot.

Reading aloud

Kindergarteners frequently listen to books being read aloud. Listening to a teacher or parent provides a model of fluent reading and helps children develop a positive attitude toward books. It also helps your child understand vocabulary and language patterns in texts.

Books read aloud are often discussed before, during and after the reading to increase involvement and understanding of the text. "This conversation is critical," says Thompson, "for it helps children build their background knowledge when adults model their thinking, experiences and images that come to mind as they read. Children can use this to connect what the author is saying, to what they already know."

Shared reading experience

Your kindergartner may take part in shared reading, an interactive reading experience. During shared reading your child joins in the reading of a big book, one with enlarged text that the whole class can see, guided by his teacher. During the reading, children are actively involved. The teacher may pause to teach vocabulary, introduce a reading skill and encourage the students to predict what comes next. Your kindergartner should be able to follow along with the text and pictures while the book is being read. The book is typically read multiple times over several days. "Active involvement between student and teacher motivates interest, enhances comprehension of story and sense of story structure," says Thompson.

 
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Comments from GreatSchools.org readers

03/12/2009:
"My son is in Kindergarden and is already learning blend words. I have forgot everything about blend words. Can you help refresh my memory so that I can help my son. Thanks"
06/11/2008:
"this is great that you have these informative reviews. I was concerned about the mathematics for kindergarteners. Can you point me to the guidelines for that? I'd appreciate it. Thank you"
04/4/2008:
"I am currently doing some hours for one of my college courses at an Elementary here in Texas. I work with pre-k students and I am very surprised to see that they already know how to spell words and read. I can't even remember learning those sorts of things when I was in pre-k."
03/13/2008:
"Hello. My daughter goes to kindergarten in Oceanside New York School 6. I am very concerned that she is not reading because the teachers do not seem to be teaching her. She tells me that they told her that they don't have the magic book??? I read with her at home and she recognizes small words. My biggest concern is that she will go to first grade without having developed her reading skills. I want to approach the teachers about this but am afraid that she will be rejected. What should I do? "
03/13/2008:
">From my experience as a kindergartener's mom, I have to say that it is tough for teachers to deal with all the different levels of instruction the kids are when they reach K. Some kids had gone through preschool, some just pre-k, and some just come right out of their homes for the first time. So their levels of readiness are very different. It is the job of kindergarten teachers to identify and develop everyone's learning and social abilities, and to try to get their classroom to a more even level by the time the kids are ready for 1st grade. In my daughters' case, she had been attending an excellent preschool for a couple years before she entered K, and she had mastered most of the kindergarten basics before she even got there. She now reads like a 3rd grader, and the teachers are doing every effort to challenge her to improve her reading and writing skills, and to keep her interested and challenged. It takes a lot from the teachers to do this, since they have to deve! lop different plans and activities for her, without making her feel too 'different'. Our help as family is always a must, as it should be in every household, by encouraging our kids to practice, to get better, and to develop a love for learning. It is not just the job of the teachers to teach our kids, but a way of family life to support their efforts and help our kids to thrive. "
03/13/2008:
"This is typical of my sons classroom. He could read and write all letters and numbers to 20 and beyond before entering kindergarten and has really advanced beyond that; reading fluently now and can count past 1000. He went through a phase of flipping some letters and numbers which is totally normal because they are learning to form their letters correctly. They don't have advanced class for kindergarteners, however, they do watch them and give them things to do to test for giftedness. The teacher does expect more from him than the other kids because he is so bright. I don't believe we have 'dumbed down.' When I was young, we didn't learn these things until first grade. Many of the kids in his class are not at his level yet and it is a challenge for the teachers to customize teaching for the different learning levels but they do try. Kids are also learning social skills. Some went to preschool, some went to daycare, some went to home preschools and some were home wit! h their parents. This too is challenging for the teacher to coordinate all these different skills that they must learn this year as more is expected in first grade. Right now, homework everynight except Friday and expected reading every night as well, to me is enough for kindergarteners. There has been much concern about the homework load which only increases with grade level. "
03/13/2008:
"My son reads in kindergarten. The public schools don't do enough to help the already reading. What do you do when your kindergartener reads at first and second grade level already, and can already add and subtract. What are they really learning?"
11/12/2007:
"It concerns me that more isn't being expected at such a time when children are capable of learning to much more so quickly. Why have we dumbed down? "
08/20/2007:
"i'm finding it hard to do homework with my daughter who will be starting first grade. it's like over the summer she forgot simple words or what sounds certain letters make. what can i do to reinforce what she's learned and also try to give her a head start?"
06/4/2007:
"My son was able to read and relate to the stories in all of the Dick and Jane books before entering kindergarten. He can still do it of course, but I am very disappointed with the instruction he has received in kindergarten. Except for the books he has learned to read with my wife or I, he has not advanced beyond that level at all in school. I informed the teacher of his abilities, but apparently no programs for advanced readers are available in kindergarten. Even worse is his ability to write. He could neatly write things like: I love Mommy (or Daddy), and I am tired, and I am hungry. Now his handwriting has become hideous, to include backwards letters and numbers, and grossly misshapen writing as well. It's very frustrating."
08/14/2006:
"This article siginifies that my sons' teacher is on the right path. I had concerns because my son never lasted to long in the 'attention mode' I had him tested and he was not ADD but LAZY (my diagnosis). He has really been excited about school and comes home with his rhymes for the day. I purchased some cards (Go Fish) with alphabet so that he can learn to identify the Lower/Capital alphabet, He was so excited, he wanted to take the cards to school to share with friends. Thanks for the information that confirms that I am on the right path with my children. "
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