Reading Aloud with Your Child: A Parent’s Guide by Russ Walsh
The beginning of a school year is a good time to take an inventory of at-home practices that parents can institute to support their children’s learning. One of the most important things that all parents should do is read aloud to their children regularly. Some teachers ask parents to make read aloud a regular part of the homework routine, but whether required by the teacher or not, the research has made it clear that read aloud is a critical home-based activity.
Here are a few tips for making read aloud successful at home.
General Information
§ Read-aloud to your child at
least once a day.
§ Set aside regular reading
times.
§ Share in the choice of
books. Allow your child to choose
sometimes, while you choose a favorite at other times.
§ Read with enthusiasm. Enjoy yourself.
§ Occasionally choose books
that are “over the head” of your child.
Listening comprehension is much more developed in young learners than
reading comprehension. More difficult books
create an intellectual challenge.
§ Fathers must make an extra
effort to do some of the read-alouds. Children need to see both parents as
people who value reading.
§ Keep reading to your child
even after the child has become a fluent reader.
Talking About Stories
Before Reading –
1. Look at the title, cover
pictures, title page.
2. Encourage your child to make
predictions. What might the story be
about? What might happen in the story?
During Reading –
1. Stop occasionally to check
predictions. Is this what you thought
would happen? Do we need to change our
predictions? What new predictions can we make?
2. Don’t forget to talk about
the pictures. In picture books,
illustrations play a central role in telling the story. Talk about the illustrator’s style, the
detail, the use of color.
3. Discuss meanings and
connotations of unfamiliar words.
After Reading –
1. Ask questions that invite
your child to talk. Avoid yes/no and one
word answer questions.
2. Ask for feeling responses.
How did the story make you feel? What
did the story make you think about? What was your favorite part of the story?
3. Talk about the characters in
the story. Talk about the major
events. Compare characters to people you
know. Compare events to things that have
happened in your life.
4. Compare the story to other
books you have read or movies or TV shows you have seen together.
Finally,
listen to your child and respond to questions in a caring and genuine way.
Enjoy read-aloud time. It can be among
the most rewarding family experiences.
Read
to Me, Daddy By Russ Walsh
Read
to me, Daddy
Of faraway places
Where elephants reign
And turtles win races.
Read to me, Daddy
And we’ll leave on a flight
To Jupiter! Mars!
And home in one night.
Read to me, Daddy
And fill up my head
With fanciful pictures
‘Fore I go to bed.
Read to me, Daddy
Of wishes come true.
Read to me, Daddy
And I’ll read to you.
Russ Walsh is the author of The Parent’s Guide to Public Education in the 21st Century,
Garn Press, 2016. He has had a 45-year career as a teacher, reading specialist,
and curriculum supervisor. He is the writer of the popular blog, Russ on Reading. His articles on
literacy, public education and parenting have been published in The Washington Post, The Progressive, The
Reading Teacher and other national publications. Russ lives in Bucks
County, Pennsylvania with his wife, Cynthia Mershon and their two cocker
spaniels.
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