Friday, November 28, 2008
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Saturday, November 22, 2008
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Tuesday, November 18, 2008
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After having presented what is the way to choose the most suitable book to read to children, today I want to clarify that are needed in these books, according to different age groups. - Books of cardboard that can "resist" the child
- books in accordance with his hands
- books with bright colors but not excessive number of images per page
- books with pictures of children, faces, familiar objects, with simple pictures
- books with no more than one or two words per page to help parents to baste a micro
From 12 months series of images of objects with a link to each other in facilitating capacity-building association logical connection between the various elements depicted in Based on contextual factors and functional characteristics of these books are:
- even cardboard books with short stories resistant
- books with few words per page
- figures of children who do things every day: play, sleep , eat, go to kindergarten
- books of animals known to the child to do simple things (eating, running, sleeping)
- bedtime books to go
to read - books with simple rhymes or text easy to understand
- by two years, many children can handle paper pages
- brilliant figures of children, pets, familiar objects
- stories of family, food, animals, cars , bicycles
- stories about brothers and sisters, on making friends, about going to school
- stories that repeat words and contain guessed, rhythms and rhymes, books that can store
- silly stories, jokes, comic figures
- books with numbers and the alphabet
books-books on friends and school
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books with information about the world - and, again, good stories, beautiful illustrations
Friday, November 14, 2008
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At 9 months is always drawn from photos and pictures of the book that seeks to take and "eat." Change easily the book, if it is not bulky, from hand to hand, indicate pages with one or more fingers. Try to turn the pages by hand full if he has seen done by parents. The books you see are holding in her arms. Or you can lie on a carpet with the child, looking at the book together.
At 12 months holds the book in hand, if helped, and turning several pages at a time, always a hand full. Give the book to the adult. Books should always be robust and manageable. May now be even larger. The figures relate to favorite family activities (eating, sleeping, playing) and small animals, while the lyrics are always the favorite nursery rhymes. Better try to avoid images of things that the child still does not know. He begins to realize inverted images of faces.
15 months turn the big pages using two fingers. Where a book contains a face, it understands that it is upside down. Sometimes he turns his face to match that of the book. He likes books with short sentences and simple, they can learn to anticipate.
18 months and anticipates complete sentences in the book. He likes books about animals (you can read funny verses, like those of animals), children, things of every day, with short sentences and simple. He began to direct the book.
At 24 months page runs fine. Drag the books around the house and "reads" to dolls or cat stories inventing himself as he wished. Turn on only one page in the right direction if it contains a face upside down. It can correct the error of the reader. He likes stories that give the opportunity to identify with the characters, telling challenges to overcome, that makes people laugh. When you walk with the boy can read the lettering, signs and signals.
30 months can "read" a book that has been read many times. He likes stories about children of his age telling moments of ordinary life (school or the doctor), friendship, brothers or sisters, but also great books, adventurous. The text should be simple. The traditional fairy tales (and especially "why" with talking animals that explain things) also help to project the fears and emotions that the child has within himself. Like the child choose the story and he also likes to have it read many times.
a child thinks and perceives the world;
Monday, November 10, 2008
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''Every child has the right to be protected not only from disease and violence but also by the lack of adequate opportunity for emotional and cognitive development. This is the heart of Born to Read . Since 1999, the project aims to promote reading aloud to children aged 6 months to 6 years. Recent scientific studies show that the read aloud, with a certain continuity, children in preschool has a positive influence from both points of view (it's an opportunity for relationship between child and parents), and cognitive (developed earlier and better understanding of language and reading skills), what's more the baby grows in 'habit of reading that lasts, then, in later life thanks early imprinting related to the report.
Reading aloud, in its apparent simplicity, it contains many valenze related to positive patterns of communication and emotional life that have a significant influence on the child's emotional development. It is considered the most important activity for the acquisition of skills required for success in reading. Reading is an ideal tool for the child to hold an adult with them in the way he liked most, that with dedication, full participation and without distractions. The presence of the adult is comforting, and provides protection and security. When the child asks for a repetition of the reading is not necessarily interested in history but perhaps wants to extend that feeling of pleasure and continue to have the mother (father, aunt or teacher) next. By reading the child's mother tongue takes over slowly, his words of its form and structure. This helps him to build their own mental structures to understand the relationship (me and the other, me and things) space-time and distance.
emerging skills in the acquisition of reading skills (emergent literacy) skills and knowledge associated with the future ability to decode words can be summarized schematically as in:
- oral language development (increasing the size of the vocabulary)
- phonological (first through the syllables, then the mixing of the rhymes and phonemes which occurs only when you start to read). This expertise is closely linked to success in reading.
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knowledge of written language - an understanding of the conventions of writing: correspondence between spoken and written language, reading left right and from top to bottom, alphabet that represents the sounds of language, knowledge of the functions of writing, the text tells a story, informs, instructs, knowledge of the alphabet, knowledge of letters and a letter from the association of and his name and in a letter and its sound
The development of emerging skills in each child varies and is influenced by several factors:
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innate ability - the quality and quantity of language heard in
family - the child's desire to learn
and self-esteem - child's exposure to literary activities.
There are marked differences in the ability to acquire social competence phonological, resulting from the quantity and quality of verbal interactions in which the child is exposed.
Reading is also a means to strengthen the outcome of a secure attachment early in life that is essential for the growth of the child's skills in all areas, because it affects the maturation of the brain, the neurological connections and thought processes. In secure attachment relationships with the child is distracted and rarely learn more.
Reading aloud is considered preventive action against school leavers and behavior problems. It determines the learning experience of reading itself, which marks the destiny child's school career.
Children can enjoy reading the daily and constant exposure over time come to first grade with higher skills and basic knowledge for future decoding of words, it will help them learn to read and write with greater ease. Numerous studies have shown that the level of reading ability found at the end of the first year of primary school years is strongly correlated with a greater ability to read texts.
E 'so obvious as to be linked, in childhood, development of language skills, confidence to the reading, language property of the child's ability to maintain attention and concentration and self-esteem and security.''
Saturday, November 8, 2008
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