(no title)
robto | 1 year ago
Both kids are now in school and reading significantly above grade level and I have different concern - their ability far outstrips their experience. So even though they can read large unfamiliar words, the subject matter of the stories that are challenging enough to be interesting to them deal with themes and experiences that are pretty foreign. Books that deal more with their experiences and interests are written at a much more basic reading level and are not interesting to them.
They seem to really enjoy reading but sometimes I wonder if early reading is really beneficial in the long run. On the other hand, I certainly read some books too young, but I don't really regret that, so maybe I'm just making up problems to worry about.
namanyayg|1 year ago
Don't have kids but I agree, this sounds part of growing up. I believe adult books as a precursor help understand real experiences better.
Being a fan of BFG and Matilda, I accidentally ended up picked up Roald Dahl's "Skin" (his adult short stories collection) when I spotted it as a preteen in my school library.
I didn't understand half of it but I still devoured it in a day.
I only started understanding when I was much older and actually experienced similar things in life.
mtlynch|1 year ago
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skin_(short_story)
Collection:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Someone_Like_You_(short_stor...
philips|1 year ago
To be super clear this isn’t an app you hand your kids. You still sit side by side and teach the lessons.
robto|1 year ago
Now I need to figure out a fun way to do spelling, since both of the kids like to write but English is really tricky to spell.
gnicholas|1 year ago
I work in literacy and am aware of a number of companies that are working to develop solutions that allow teachers/parents to level up/down reading materials to address this mismatch.
ghostpepper|1 year ago
woleium|1 year ago
coryrc|1 year ago
4 is still pretty young so I'm not stressing about it.
robto|1 year ago
sinuhe69|1 year ago
In the beginning, I worked with my son, but after about a week he was able to continue on his own. We started very light with 2 lessons per weak + maths lessons (oh, they have maths too. But the reading app is much better, IMO). Later it was probably 3 lessons per weak, IIRC. I still do the reading with him in the first month, but in the later months he could read (the task) on his own.
After 3 months my son could read independently and he ventured out to read books outside the app. Today he is an avid reader with a wide range of interests (business and marketing is the currentbhot topic :D ). He scores in the top 3% in reading (measured twice a year by the MAPS tests) and in the top 0.001% in maths. Considering his developmental problems, I think it's remarkable progress. And not least thanks to the Reading Eggs app.
I always find the discussion about how to teach reading in the US superfluous because there is a proven better way and it is so cheap. So maybe give it a try.
Disclaimer: I am in no way affiliated with Reading Eggs. Just a happy customer.
elboru|1 year ago
Isn’t that what parenthood is all about?
soulofmischief|1 year ago
bombela|1 year ago
Age 7, I would read the dictionary at night, one word definition at a time, out of sheer curiosity.
By age 14 I stopped reading books. I could never relate to any of the human emotions. I did learn that money, fame, and sex was a big deal perhaps. But you don't need books to learn that if you have a social life instead of reading books all day.
All this made me appear smart for my age, but that doesn't mean I was. I merely appeared smart.
Hitting the plateau was rough.
cpursley|1 year ago
danielbln|1 year ago