Teachers Pay Teachers is having the annual Cyber Sale on Monday and Tuesday, November 27th and November 28th! I am busy readying my store. I hope you will stop by to see what is available; my store is Chalk Dust and Apples
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Teachers Pay Teachers is having the annual Cyber Sale on Monday and Tuesday, November 27th and November 28th! I am busy readying my store. I hope you will stop by to see what is available; my store is Chalk Dust and Apples
.
Here is a list of over 60 wonderful read-aloud stories that I have enjoyed reading to my child and my students over the years. You will find many more as you visit book stores and your local library. Your child will enjoy reading them over and over!
Click here for a printable copy of the list. Read Aloud Books
| Book Title | Author | Celebrate the Letters |
| A Chair for My Mother | Vera B. Williams | M/m |
| A Hole is to Dig | Ruth Krauss | H/h, D/d |
| Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day | Judith Viorst | A/a |
| Bedtime for Frances | Russell Hoban | B/b, F/f |
| Biscuit | Alyssa Satin Capucilli | B/b |
| Caps for Sale | Esphyr Sobodkina | C/c |
| Chicka Chicka Boom Boom | Bill Martin, Jr. | B/b |
| Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs | Judi Barrett | C/c, M/m |
| Corduroy | Don Freeman | C/c |
| David Goes to School | David Shannon | D/d, S/s |
| Frog and Toad are Friends | Arnold Lobel | F/f, T/t |
| Goldilocks and the Three Bears | James Marshall | G/g, B/b |
| Goodnight Moon | Margaret Wise Brown | M/m |
| Green Eggs and Ham | Dr. Seuss | G/g, E/e, H/h |
| Gregory the Terrible Eater | Mitchell Sharmat | G/g, T/t |
| Harold and the Purple Crayon | Crockett Johnson | H/h, P/p |
| Harry the Dirty Dog | Gene Zion | H/h, D/d |
| Hattie and the Fox | Mem Fox | H/h, F/f |
| How Rocket Learned to Read | Tad Hills | R/r |
| Hurry! Hurry! | Eve Bunting | H/h |
| I can Read with my Eyes Shut! | Dr. Seuss | R/r |
| It Looked Like Spilt Milk | Charles G. Shaw | M/m |
| Kindergarten Rocks! | Katie Davis | K/k |
| Lemons are NOT Red | Laura Vaccaro Seeger | L/l |
| Leo the Late Bloomer | Robert Krauss | L/l |
| Letters from a Desperate Dog | Eileen Christelow | L/l, D/d |
| Library Lion | Michelle Knudsen | L/l |
| Little Bear | Else Holmelund Minarik | B/b, L/l |
| Llama Llama Red Pajama | Anna Dewdney | L/l |
| Look Out Kindergarten, Here I Come! | Nancy Carlson | K/k |
| Lost and Found | Oliver Jeffers | L/l, F/f, P/p |
| Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile | Bernard Waber | L/l, C/c |
| Make Way for Ducklings | Robert McCloskey | M/m, D/d |
| Me I Am! | Jack Prelutsky | M/m |
| Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel | Virginia Lee Burton | M/m, S/s |
| Miss Nelson is Missing | Harry Allard, James Marshall | N/n, M/m, T/t |
| No Roses for Harry! | Gene Zion | R/r, H/h |
| No, David! | David Shannon | D/d |
| Pete’s a Pizza | William Steig | P/p |
| Regards to the Man in the Moon | Ezra Jack Keats | M/m |
| Sheep in a Jeep | Nancy E. Shaw | S/s, J/j |
| Snowballs | Lois Ehlert | S/s |
| Snowmen at Night | Caralyn Buehner | S/s |
| Stellaluna | Janell Cannon | S/s, B/b |
| Stone Soup | Marcia Brown | S/s |
| Strega Nona | Tomie DePaola | S/s |
| Swimmy | Leo Lionni | S/s |
| Sylvester and the Magic Pebble | William Steig | S/s, M/m, P/p |
| Tacky the Penguin | Helen Lester | T/t, P/p |
| The Carrot Seed | Ruth Krauss | C/c |
| The Kissing Hand | Audrey Penn | K/k, H/h |
| The Little Engine that Could | Watty Piper | E/e, T/t |
| The Little House | Virginia Lee Burton | H/h |
| The Mitten | Jan Brett | M/m |
| The Mysterious Tadpole | Steven Kellogg | M/m, T/t |
| The Pout-Pout Fish | Deborah Diesen | P/p, F/f |
| The Snowy Day | Ezra Jack Keats | S/s |
| The Story of Ferdinand | Munro Leaf | F/f, B/b |
| The Ugly Duckling | Hans Christian Andersen | U/u, D/d |
| The Very Hungry Caterpillar | Eric Carle | C/c, V/v, H/h |
| Three Billy Goats Gruff | Paul Galdone | G/g, |
| Tikki Tikki Tembo | Arlene Mosel | T/t |
| Time out for Sophie | Rosemary Wells | T/t. S/s |
| Wemberly Worried | Kevin Henkes | W/w |
| Where the Wild Things Are | Maurice Sendak | W/h |
| Whistle for Willie | Ezra Jack Keats | W/h |
Reading Tips for Parents: You can be the key to your child’s success with literacy. As his or her first teacher, you are in a unique position to help instill a love of reading in your child. The first thing for you to do is model reading; your child should see you reading every day for information or for enjoyment. Having a home filled with books, magazines, comics, newspapers and other print material is a good start.
Not long ago I found myself cringing in the grocery store when I heard a frustrated mom threaten her five year old by saying, “If you don’t stop that, I will take away the iPad and you will have to read.” Nooooo! Reading should be a pleasure, not ever a punishment!
Children with a large supply of reading materials in their homes are known to score higher on standardized tests. Why? Think about it.
There is a tremendous difference between digital input and text. When a child watches TV or plays on a tablet, all the pictures come streaming in from the screen. When a child reads, s/he has to visualize the text. The act of painting the picture the author is describing is a most creative process. Reading helps students begin to visualize new possibilities, solve problems, think out of the box, and become the young adult that companies clamor to hire.
Here are some easy suggestions for helping your child develop a lifelong love of reading.
Raising a reader is a joyous journey for parents and the reward is great. Check back here on the blog for a list of wonderful read-aloud books to share with your child. In the meantime, snuggle up tonight for a sweet bedtime story.
Reading with your Beginning Reader
In my last blog I challenged you to read with your child for 20 minutes each night. This practice makes a BIG difference in the reader your child becomes. Yet, parents of young children who are in the process of learning to read may have questions about how to approach this.
Actually, it is pretty easy. Here are some tips that will help you relax and enjoy the experience with your children as they learn to read.
great! Re-reading is a great strategy for building stronger readers.Learning to read is a magical time in a child’s life. Reading opens up a world of possibilities and adventures. Sharing this is a wonderful experience for a parent. Don’t miss it…it only happens once.
Does this sound familiar? The teacher sends home a note every week asking that parents read with their child for 20 minutes each weeknight. You are thinking, “Does she not get it? I have 3 children! I work all day, have to cook dinner, answer the phone, fold laundry, feed the dog, clean the litter box, sign field trip forms, pay bills, and chase a toddler. Are you kidding me!?!”
There are days when 20 minutes sounds like an eternity, but, let’s take a moment to look at this reading equation mathematically.
John reads 20 minutes five nights of every week;
Sally only reads 4 minutes a night, if at all.
Step 1: Multiply the minutes per night X 5 times each week.
John: reads 20 minutes X 5 times per week = 100 minutes each week.
Sally: reads 4 minutes X 5 times per week = 20 minutes each week.
Step 2: Multiply the minutes per week X 4 weeks each month.
John: 100 minutes per week X 4 = 400 minutes per month.
Sally: 20 minutes per week X 4 = 80 minutes per month.
Step 3: Multiply the minutes per month X 9 months per school year.
John: 400 minutes per month X 9 months = 3600 minutes per year.
Sally: 80 minutes per month X 9 months = 720 minutes per year.
Step 4: Divide the number of minutes per year by 360 minutes per day to find the number of days spent reading.
John: 3600 divided by 360 = an additional 10 full days of school spent just reading.
Sally: 720 divided by 360 = only 2 additional days of school spent reading.
So, by the end of 8th grade, or 9 academic years:
John will have spent an additional 90 days reading. John has gotten the equivalent of an extra half of a 180 day school year just spent reading!
Sally will have read the equivalent of 18 days, or one tenth of a 180 day school year.
Food for Thought:
So there you have it. Twenty minutes a day can make a big difference and set your child up for success. Will you do it perfectly? Probably not. But if you teach your child to value reading by reading together, you will definitely have a positive result! You are your child’s most significant role model and I already know that you like to read…you are reading a blog! My guess is…you’ve got this!
…figure out a word when we read together?
Here are some strategies to use when decoding unknown words:
1) Have your child look at the picture. If the word will give your child help with the word, tell your child that the word is something that can be seen in the picture. If not, the picture is a clue your child can use.
2) Suggest your child look for chunks in the word. Chunks are little pieces of a word that are familiar like it in sit, at in hat, and in stand, or ing in jumping.
3) Ask your child to get his/her mouth ready to say the word. Show your child how to shape his/her mouth to say the first letter sound of the word. Sometimes that beginning sound is all it takes! Be sure to look at the sounds that end the word too.
4) Ask your child if the word looks like another word s/he knows. For example, if your child knows the word car, star, far, hard and jar are similar words. Look for similarities together.
5) You can suggest your child go on and read to the end of the sentence. Many times the other words in the sentence will help him/her figure out the unknown word.
6) If your child says the wrong word while reading, ask questions. Some good questions to ask are:
7) If none of this works, tell your child the word. Tell him/her how you were able to figure out the word, which strategy above worked. Then, be sure to revisit the word so your child sees it again.
Our children remember two things…the most caring and the most cruel words directed at them. As a parent and teacher, I want my children to be surrounded by words that make them feel loved, valued, and appreciated. But sometimes, “good job” feels old, tired, inadequate. Here are some new ways to let your children know how truly proud you are and how special they are!
That’s Incredible! * How Extraordinary! * Far Out! * Outstanding! * I Can’t Get Over It! * Great!
Amazing Effort! * Unbelievable Work! * Wonderful! * Marvelous! * Phenomenal! * You’ve Got It!
Superb! * Cool! * Excellent! * You’re Special! * Out Of Sight! * First Rate! * You’ve Outdone Yourself!
Way To Go! * Thumbs Up! * You’re The Best! * You Came Through! * Terrific! * You Tried Hard!
Your Help Counts! * You Made It Happen! * It Couldn’t Be Better! * Fantastic Work!
You’re a Real Trooper! * Fabulous! * Bravo! * Exceptional! * You’re Unique! * Awesome!
Breathtaking! * The Time You Put In Really Shows! * You’re A Great Example For Others!
Keep Up The Good Work! * I Knew You Had It In You! * Dynamite! * It’s Everything I Hoped For!
You Should Be Proud Of Yourself! * What An Imagination! * You Made The Difference! * Stupendous!
You’re Sensational! * Very Good! * A+ Work! * Super Job!* Good For You! * Take A Bow! *Nice Going
Well Done! *Class Act! * You’re Inspiring! *How Artistic! * Hooray For You! * You’re A Joy!
How Thoughtful Of You! * You’re Amazing! * You Go The Extra Mile! * What A Great Idea!
You Deserve A Hug! * Extra Special Work! * You’re Appreciated! * Thoughtful! * You’re Tops!
Great Role Model! * You’re Neat! * You’ve Got What It Takes! * You’re #1! * You’re A Shining Star!
Outstanding! * Wow! * Remarkable! * Beautiful! * You’ve Got Know How! * Very Impressive!
You’re Sharp! * You’re A Winner! * Hot Dog! * Spectacular Work! * You’re So Kind! *Hard Worker!
Totally Involved! * Thanks For Helping! * Great Discovery! * You’ve Earned My Respect!
Thanks For Caring! * You’re A-Okay! * Congratulations! * How Original! * You’re A Champ!
You’re A Pleasure To Know! * Very Brave! * What A Genius! * You’re Very Talented! You’re The Greatest!
You’re Super! * You’re On Target! *
If you don’t like any of these words, try three simple words… “I LOVE YOU!”
Mother Teresa is quoted as saying, “We shall never know all the good that a simple smile can do.” I blogged about faces yesterday, and have continued to think about the power of our expressions. So, today I want to explore a bit more…
Don’t you just love it when someone smiles at you? Smiles are like the bubbles in a soda – they make your face sparkle! When someone smiles at me, I just automatically smile back. And then, as I walk away, that happy feeling follows me.
One of the first things a baby learns to do is to recognize the important faces in their lives – momma, daddy, grandma or grandpa, brother, sister. Remember the first time your baby smiled up at you and you knew they recognized you? That is such a special memory, isn’t it? Smiles never lose their value; they are important to you and to your child.
Now, let’s do a reality check. You work all day and afternoons are terrible for working moms. I remember when my son was little, I referred to the time between 4:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. as “Arsenic Hours”. There were days when taking poison seemed like a good alternative…kids crying, homework battles, dinner burning on the stove, phone ringing, toys all over the floor. You know the drill. Looking back, I got so caught up in “getting things done”, I forgot to stop and enjoy my time with my child. Before I could really relax, it was bath and bedtime and a new round of arguing began. I mean, how many times do you really have to remind your child to use soap?
So, what is my message today? I guess it is that I want to encourage you to welcome your child home each day with a genuine “I’m so glad to see you!” smile. Focus on the positive. The toys won’t be littering the floor forever; and I promise there are days when I can’t wait to have a grandchild so I can spend time stepping over toys again.
I was watching TV one afternoon and heard Dr. Phil say that we teach others how to treat us. In other words, we create the atmosphere we live in. Smiling makes that atmosphere so much more pleasant. When we smile, people smile back. We can’t resist; it’s human nature. Maya Angelou said, “If you only have one smile in you, give it to the people you love.” So promise me you’ll take a second to give your child a big grin and see what happens.