Archive for the ‘Improve Reading Skills’ Category

Reading Help in Just 5 Minutes a Day

March 31st, 2011

Reading Help in 5 Minutes

Parents and teachers keep their eyes open for ways to give their children reading help.  Karen Acres from The DesMoinesRegister.com just reported in the Urbandale Schools section what Lisa Langan's third, fourth, and fifth graders are doing to improve their reading skills. This simple technique is used as early as first grade for reading help. This same Five Minutes to Better Reading Skills is also used by adults that want to improve their reading skills. "Lisa Langan's third-, fourth- and fifth-graders are using a new reading strategy from the book "Five Minutes to Better Reading Skills" by Bonnie Terry. They practice the strategy at least twice a week. The reading materials include word lists starting with lists of three-letter short vowel words to long vowel words, vowel pairs in words, consonant combinations, two-syllable words, and common prefixes and suffixes. Each drill builds gradually on the previous drills. The first four minutes are an oral pre-read practice of the drill page, and the final minute is a one-minute oral reading of the same list. Each drill page has four sets of words. The first three word sets have extra spaces between the letters, whereas the final list has no spaces between the word letters. The spacing helps students review the specific phonic rules as well as providing visual support. Word list mastery depends on the grade level. Langan's students graph their scores, which keeps the students motivated about  their reading progress."

Reading Help in 5 Minutes Really Works

University or Florida's researcher Cecil Mercer published his results from his study Effects of Fluency Intervention for Middle Schoolers with Specific Learning Disabilities in (2000) stating daily practice can be for as little as five or six minutes.

Reading Help Video: See how you can improve reading fluency in just 5 minutes a day.

Reading Fluency: Five Minutes to Better Reading Skills

Substantial gains in reading fluency came from repeated oral reading of various sorts such as letters or words for five or six minutes a day. The key to the success was doing the repeated oral reading over a period of time e.g. six months to twenty-three months. So, now view the video that shows you how you can help your children improve their reading fluency in just 5 minutes a day. For more information on other skills that affect reading ability, be sure to go to Learning Reading Help: 3 Reasons for Reading Struggles.

4 Activities to Improve Reading Skills (Part 4 – Writing)

August 9th, 2010

Improve Reading Skills Part 4 - Writing

As a parent you have a large responsibility. You need to not only care for your child, you also need to watch over their education and be sure they learn with ease. Reading, writing, and spelling can be difficult for many kids. But as a parent, you do have the power and ability to help your kids improve reading, writing, and spelling skills. Now what I mean here is that you as a parent can help your child improve reading skills whether they have an identified learning disability, dyslexia, ADHD, are falling through the cracks or are gifted.

4 Easy to Implement Activities to Improve Reading Skills

Their are 4 easy to implement activities that each take just a few minutes a day to improve reading. 1. Improve reading fluency in 5 minutes a day 2. Improve spelling and learn the 8 ways we put letters together to make words 3. Improve reading comprehension by playing a reading comprehension game 4. Improve writing skills using specially designed graphic organizers I've already talked about how you can help your child improve their reading fluency in just minutes a day. I've already talked about how you can help your child improve their spelling skills in just minutes a day. And, I've talked about how you can help your child improve their reading comprehension by playing a game with them. so, today I’m going to talk about the fourth activity which is helping your children improve their reading – and that is by helping them with their writing skills.

The 4th Activity to Improve Reading Skills

The fourth activity to help your kids improve reading skills is to help your kids learn how to take notes with the graphic organizers found in Ten Minutes to Better Study Skills. These fill-in-the-blank graphic organizers make note-taking, paragraph writing, and essay writing easy. As a parent, I hated watching my son struggle with a writing assignment. I’m sure you feel the same way. One of the best things I found to do to make this note-taking and paragraph writing or even essay writing easier was to create graphic organizers that were easy for him to fill in. Then he wasn’t staring at a blank sheet of paper anymore. It was so much easier for him to fill in the blanks and within about 10 minutes he’d have his notes done. His life became easier and my life became easier too. We didn’t have the ‘homework wars’ going on anymore. You know, I’ve had students bring me their notes over the years that they had done in class when they needed help writing their paper from them. The sad thing was, they couldn’t make heads or tails out of their notes even though they used a ‘webbing’ system when they did them. The notes were just too hard for them to follow. That is why I created the graphic organizers the way I did, so students whether they had perception problems or not would be able to utilize the notes they took. It isn’t enough to take the notes. You need to be able to utilize them after you’ve taken them. Donna Walker Tileston, author of What Every Teacher Should Know About the Brain states, “Approximately 87% of learners either need to see the learning or do something with it. Using visuals with the learning will help students take in the information more efficiently, but even more important, it helps them to develop their own methods for organizing content.” Using pictographs, charts and graphs, graphic organizers, and note-taking models is the way to do this. So, give the graphic organizers from Ten Minutes to Better Study Skills a try. I created them in such a way that once he filled them out he’d actually be able to use them for study guides or for help in turning notes into paragraphs or rough drafts into final copies.