[blparent] tips for reading to small children
Jody Ianuzzi
thunderwalker321 at gmail.com
Wed Jul 22 13:20:23 UTC 2015
Hello Nicole
Wendy makes an excellent point. Has he been tested for a reading disability?
JODY 🐺
thunderwalker321 at gmail.com
"There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes." DOCTOR WHO (Tom Baker)
> On Jul 21, 2015, at 11:24 PM, Wendy Meuse via blparent <blparent at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> Hi Nicole: My daughter was the same way. I found out later that she is borderline dislexic. Oh man I had a heck of a time getting
> her to read anything outloud or otherwise. I tried getting books out of the library I knew she would like, and that helped a little.
> For example, she loves horses. so one of the books we read was about a girl and her horse. She still does not like reading much,
> but she is pretty good at it now. She read to her children and that is grate.
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Nicole Helmkamp via blparent" <blparent at nfbnet.org>
> To: "Blind Parents Mailing List" <blparent at nfbnet.org>
> Cc: "Nicole Helmkamp" <nkhutch86 at gmail.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2015 10:14 AM
> Subject: Re: [blparent] tips for reading to small children
>
>
> Hi Jodie,
>
> That's exactly how we go about it now. I have him spell the word to me and we sounded out together. But because he is sofar behind I
> would say 90% of the books he's being asked to read in school are above his reading level and comprehensionhi Jodie,
>
> That's exactly how we go about it now. I have him spell the word to me and we sounded out together. But because he is so far behind
> I would say 90% of the books he's been asked to read in school are above his reading level and comprehension at this point. But I am
> working hard to get him caught up before school starts this year. It's sometimes a challenge because he does not enjoy reading or
> even trying. So every time he's asked to read a book he throws a huge temper tantrum. But I'm not giving up.
>
> Nicole
> Sent from my iPhone
>
>> On Jul 21, 2015, at 1:04 PM, Jody Ianuzzi via blparent <blparent at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Nicole
>>
>> When my kids were learning to read I didn't have to see the book to help them. I would have them read aloud and when they came to
>> a word they didn't know, I would have them spell it and we would sound it out together. Probably the biggest hurdle he has is
>> feeling comfortable reading out loud so if he feels comfortable reading to you, that is a big step.
>>
>> JODY p:
>> thunderwalker321 at gmail.com
>>
>> "There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes." DOCTOR WHO (Tom Baker)
>>
>>
>>
>>> On Jul 21, 2015, at 11:35 AM, Nicole Helmkamp via blparent <blparent at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hello,
>>> I too am curious about this as I have a nine-year-old stepson who is very behind in reading. He is at like a first or second
>>> grade level. Has anyone tried using the Bard books from the NLS to listen to with their children? I have not tried this yet but I
>>> just recently thought about it. He is still reading small books but I wonder if there is another way I can get a hold of the
>>> books he's reading online or in a different format so that I could either read them before hand and follow along with him or know
>>> the words that he is missing to be able to help.
>>>
>>> Nicole
>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>>
>>>> On Jul 21, 2015, at 10:16 AM, Jody Ianuzzi via blparent <blparent at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hello Dawn,
>>>>
>>>> Yes, I did the same thing when my ids were small. My daughter wanted a tape player just like mommy's so I got the Fischer Price
>>>> cassette player. Then we got the cassette book sets and listened to them together. We could also borrow the tape book sets
>>>> from the library.
>>>>
>>>> That was twenty five years ago and I don't know if cassette books are available any more.
>>>>
>>>> I wonder if there are digital book alternatives now or iPhone apps for story time.
>>>>
>>>> JODY p:
>>>> thunderwalker321 at gmail.com
>>>>
>>>> "There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes." DOCTOR WHO (Tom Baker)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> On Jul 21, 2015, at 8:45 AM, dawn stumpner via blparent <blparent at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> All the tips so far sound great and are things I did with my kids when they were little. It sounded to me from your original
>>>>> post like you may not be a braille reader, and I thought of another kind of book that was fun when the kids were small. There
>>>>> were some print books and some print-braille books (with pictures like kids enjoy) that came with a cassette and that would
>>>>> have a sound like a bell or a beep when it was time to turn the page. When they were under 5, they really enjoyed being in
>>>>> charge of when each page was turned, and it was great for me too, particularly for the books that didn't have braille like ones
>>>>> from the library. Unfortunately, it has been quite some time since my kids were small, so I haven't looked for those kinds of
>>>>> books in a long time, so you'd have to ask at different places to see if they had them. I think they must still exist. I
>>>>> think I got most of them from my local library (the ones with no braille), and from a place in my city that does braille and
>>>>> recording as a volunteer service and keeps a lending library. I used to also sometimes get these books called "Books for Tots"
>>>>> or something like that from a place in California. I can't remember the name, but I'll try to think of it. Maybe someone on
>>>>> this list remembers them too... they're the place that used to send out those EXPECTATIONS books each year with 4 raised
>>>>> pictures, a scratch-and-sniff page, and an anthology of stories and books free to blind children each year. They have
>>>>> all-braille books, but they (at least used to, and hopefully still do) produce books with pictures in them that comes with a
>>>>> set of toys or figures related to the story and a sound recording. Blind kids could pick out a certain number of books free
>>>>> each year, but they also at the time my kids were little gave books to blind parents of sighted children, and you could always
>>>>> purchase books, too.
>>>>> You might also get some of those fun "sound books" that have very little text (you could probably even memorize it or just wing
>>>>> it), and then you push a button to hear the sound. For example, one page will have a truck, and the child pushes the button
>>>>> corresponding to the truck to hear a truck sound, and then the next page will have a train, a boat, a plane, and so forth with
>>>>> those sounds. There are also books where you can touch things on each page (I remember one with animals, and each page had a
>>>>> place you could touch the cat's sandpapery tongue, the sheep's woolly fleece, etc.
>>>>> The part where I can't be very helpful is remembering where I got each of these kinds of books, but if you ask around at
>>>>> Seedlings, your local library, and even bookstores for the little books with the audio recordings, you should find some. You
>>>>> could also contact a place that volunteers to braille and record books. It wouldn't be very expensive to give them some Dr.
>>>>> Seus, Curious George, Mercer Mayer's Critter Books, or whatever you find at garage sales, and they could record them on tape,
>>>>> putting a sound like a bell, a clap, or whatever to indicate it's time to turn the page for the next picture and text. You
>>>>> could also ask them to indicate which page you start on with a tactile clue like a dot in the corner of the page. The place
>>>>> that does brailling and recording a lot in Madison Wisconsin is BLTS (Braille Library and Transcription Services), and they
>>>>> might be able to do something like that for you even if you don't live in Wisconsin. I know they lend their books and
>>>>> materials to people all over the country, too.
>>>>> Sorry this response was so long. I wish you luck! I'm sure you'll find a way! And if I think of the name of the place in CA or
>>>>> any other ideas, I'll most again. There are a TON of good old plain audio books too that you can listen to together at any
>>>>> age, but I know when kids are 3, they really like having pictures with stories.
>>>>> Dawn
>>>>>
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