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Starting out Right: A Guide to Promoting Children's Reading Success
Starting out Right: A Guide to Promoting Children's Reading Success

by M. Susan Burns (Editor), Betty Alberts, Peg Griffin (Editor), Catherine E. Snow (Editor)/ Paperback, 182 pages

From the Publisher

Simply put, too many people cannot read as well as they need to for success in life. With literacy problems plaguing children in America and elsewhere around the world, Starting Out Right pulls together advice from experts in the field of reading education.

This book identifies the most important questions and explores the authoritative answers on the topic of how children can grow into readers:

  • What are the key elements all children need in order to become good readers?
  • What can parents and caregivers provide all children so that they are prepared for reading instruction by the time that they get to school?
  • What concepts about language and literacy should be included in beginning reading instruction?
  • How can we prevent reading difficulties from infancy through the early grades?
  • What are the most important questions that parents can pose to school boards, principals, and elected officials who make decisions regarding early reading instruction?

Readers will find out how to help youngsters build word recognition, avoid comprehension problems, and more—with checklists of specific accomplishments to be achieved at different ages: for very young children, for kindergarten students, and for first, second, and third grade students. Included are 55 activities to do with children to help them become successful readers, a list of 100 recommended children's books, and a guide to CD-ROMs and Internet resources.

Great strides have been made toward identifying the best ways to teach children to read. Starting Out Right provides a wealth of knowledge based on a summary of extensive research. It is a "must-read" for parents, child care providers, tutors, teachers, specialists in primary education, literacy advocates, and policy makers.

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Annotation

Great strides have been made recently toward identifying the best ways to teach children to read. This book provides a wealth of knowledge based on a summary of extensive research. It is a "must read" for specialists in primary education as well as parents, pediatricians, child care providers, tutors, literacy advocates, policy makers, and teachers. The book identifies the most important questions and explores the authoritative answers on the topic of how children can grow into readers, including: What are the key elements all children need in order to become good readers? What can parents and caregivers provide all children so that they are prepared for reading instruction by the time that they get to school? What concepts about language and literacy should be included in beginning reading instruction? How can we prevent reading difficulties starting with infants and into the early grades? What to ask school boards, principals, elected officials, and other policy makers who make decisions regarding early reading instruction. You'll find out how to help youngsters build word recognition, avoid comprehension problems, and more:with checklists of specific accomplishments to be expected at different ages: for very young children, for kindergarten students, and for first, second, and third grade students. Included are 55 activities to do with children to help them become successful readers, a list of recommended children's books, and a guide to CD-ROMs and websites.

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From The Critics

Baltimore Sun

...offers all the advice a parent needs.

Publishers Weekly

This helpful resource book for parents and educators stresses the importance of establishing strong reading skills in early childhood. Editors M. Susan Burns, Peg Griffin and Catherine E. Snow present a thorough guide to building a strong framework for reading, beginning in infancy and continuing through grade three. In each section, the authors offer practical, hands-on activities to share with children that will ignite interest in reading and build skills. Along with the development of specific reading skills, such as phonological and phonemic awareness, the editors explain how new experiences help expand a child's vocabulary. In addition to recommending children's reading activities at home (such as compiling grocery lists, singing songs, telling stories and, of course, reading), the book describes goals that should be reached at various ages (a kindergartner, for instance, should notice when simple sentences don't make sense). In the final section, the editors reveal that most reading problems can be avoided or resolved in the early years and emphasize the importance of a reader-friendly home, day-care and school environment. Parents will find this a comprehensive resource, and it will be especially useful for teachers planning literacy-enhancing classroom activities. (Feb.)

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