How To Teach Reading To Younger Kids
Learning to read can be an exciting time! These tips will help you as you guide your young reader through the initial stages of reading.
You may not be a teacher, but something as crucial as literacy should not be left as the sole responsibility of any one person. The more ways we know how to teach reading to younger kids, the more we can aid in their educational development. Whether it is your own kid or someone else’s, everyone benefits from investing into the next generation. So, here are some tips when helping those little ones learn how to read:
Have Patience.
The first rule is obvious: have patience. If a child is scared of being wrong due to an overly strict teacher, they won’t try, and if they won’t try, they won’t learn how to progress. Don’t forget, English is no simple language. Even learning the word “patience” requires patience, because why in heaven’s name is the letter ‘t’ making a ‘sh’ sound? And why do we need a ‘c’ in the word, when we could just use the letter ‘s’? These young students must learn rules only to find out those rules are often broken. So remember to bear with them as they learn, because it is no easy task.
Practice, Practice, Practice
Repetition is the key to retention. If a child only practices reading once a week, it may take them even longer than seven times the amount of time a kid who practices everyday may need. This is because the once a week practice will spend a good portion of time simply reviewing what they learned previously, whereas daily practice makes it easier for a child to remember and quickly build off of what they learned.
Assessments
Be aware of where a child is at in their reading journey. This will help you to know the next step they need to be taking, or if they need to pause and spend more time focusing on what they’ve already learned. Can they identify all the letters and their sounds? Can they pronounce C-V and C-V-C combinations? Do they know vowel combination rules? Do they understand the words they read? How many words can they read in a minute? The smaller and more specific each step is, the more you know exactly where your child is at, and exactly what you need to teach them next. So make sure to assess them as this will allow you to better organize their reading journey allowing them to progress faster.
Make it Fun
If a child does not enjoy reading, there will be no desire to learn. They likely won’t understand how important it is for their future, so you may have to persuade them by having them read about a topic they enjoy. This may mean letting them choose the book or you could write a quick story utilizing some of their favorite cartoon characters.
Don’t Stress
While it is important your child learns to read, don’t forget every student has different strengths. Some children learn faster than others, so don’t be anxious if your child is learning a bit slow. Although some kids could benefit from some extra attention or tutoring in this area, once a child learns to read, they should be able to catch up with their peers.
Exercises and Activities
If your child is at the stage where they are learning to read, try out some of these activities to help them develop their sense of words and language.
Have them circle, box, or underline specific site words in a newspaper article
Read to a child and occasionally pause to let them read the words they know how to read.
Have them follow along in a book while everyone takes turns reading aloud
Have them try to write a simple story
“Bring me something that starts with the letter _” Game
Give them a picture or comic they must write a caption for
Spelling quizzes with scrabble letters or spelling words out of playdough
Charades or pictionary where they must write down what others are acting out or drawing
Have them make sticky note labels for as many things in their room as they can
Teach them words on common signs or brand logos they are familiar with
Re-read the same stories multiple times, to help them better remember certain words
Play word game apps on a mobile device or computer.
Watch shows like Alphablocks or Between the Lions
Download reading apps on your mobile device
“What’s the Missing Letter?” Word Game
Write letters in chalk in the driveway, and time how fast the kids can run to each letter to spell the words they are told.
Sources:
Crowe, Ashley. “27 Fun Reading Activities To Try At Home or In The Classroom.” Prodigy. December 16, 2021 (visited 10 April 2022).
https://www.prodigygame.com/main-en/blog/reading-activities/
https://www.prodigygame.com/main-en/blog/reading-apps/
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_qs3c0ehDvZkbiEbOj6Drg
7 Facts about the Academy for G.O.D.
We claim an alternative approach to K-12 Christ-centered education, but what truly makes the Academy unique? You may be surprised!
In 2021, the Academy for G.O.D. was recognized for some awards in the Nashville Scene's magazine. In the readers' poll awards of their yearly best issue, the Academy was included among the top 3 in the categories of Best Private School, Best Elementary School, Best Junior High, and Best High School. So what makes the Academy so special? Check out these 7 facts to learn a bit more about how we do education here at the Academy.
1. Innovative Level System. Unlike traditional schools, we do not have the typical leveling system that puts students into grades. Instead, elementary students are grouped by generals, specifics, and focus levels. Every student has their own uniquities, and thus they may require more time in certain subjects than others. By grouping students like this, it provides fluidity between traditional grade levels, allowing students to learn at their own pace without feeling left behind.
2. No Letter Grades. Another big way in which the Academy is reshaping education is by doing away with letter grades in elementary. Young students are often unable to disassociate the grade on their work from being a grade on themselves. This can lead to unhealthy mindsets that can prohibit learning. Instead, the students are given benchmarks for each course they take, and then evaluated on how well they understand that aspect of the course topic. This keeps kids from stressing about grades too early, and instead allows them to better enjoy the learning experience.
3. Students have Lead & Course Teachers. When a student is at the Academy, they are put in a class with similarly aged peers under a lead teacher. These lead teachers are responsible for overseeing the students' holistic education. However, the students also have course teachers who instruct on their areas of expertise, to ensure the students are receiving the best education possible. At a 14:1 average student-teacher ratio, the Academy is much lower than the state average.
4. High School Academic and Creative Track for Graduating. A highly project-based track focused on development in the creatives is available to the high school students alongside the common academic track. This option is a special opportunity for students who are wanting to increase their knowledge and abilities in certain creative avenues. Upper-level courses like, “Directed Studies” and “Student Internship” allow older students to hone in a specific area of learning or skill set.
5. Variety of Online Education & Hybrid Options. If you feel like you are missing out because you are a bit too far away to send your kids to the Academy, then don’t worry. There are a number of options for online education, even allowing students to take individual classes a la carte. There is also a hybrid option for homeschool students who still want to receive some face-to-face learning.
6. Exciting Courses. One of the ways the Academy implements its focus on holistic development is by offering courses on social and emotional intelligence. Along with this, new courses are routinely being developed based on the curiosity of the students. This keeps students excited and interested about learning as they are able to cater the education to meet the needs and interests of the students.
7. Special Events and Extracurricular Activities The Academy has a variety of fun extracurricular activities. Not only do they have great team sports like soccer, basketball, and volleyball, but there are also a number of clubs for students who have other interests such as geo-caching, yoga, chess, or pokemon.
A Prayer to Be Enduring Problem Solvers
Deputy Headmaster, Ms. Corey Foster, reflects on a student’s prayer to open her creative arts class and how such a request from the Lord informed their class on critical thinking and SEL skills.
On Monday morning this week, my 7th grade Mixed Media Art class began with a student led prayer that has impacted me all week. The words of this student’s prayer included, “Lord, give us the patience to be effective problem solvers. Help us to not get down on ourselves when we have to try something again, because we are students and we are still learning.”
Sit with that. Read it again. Think about a 13-year-old student asking for this type of help from the Lord for herself and her classmates.
These words are profound for a few reasons. First, teens today are faced with all kinds of social media that promotes fast paced pressure for them to have an appearance that they have things figured out. This prayer directly opposes what the culture they are living in demands and instead, sticks closely to God’s hopes for them. Second, our values here at the Academy resonated in this student’s prayer. She not only acknowledged herself and her classmates as students, but took the humble position that they are in need of continued growth because they are learning. Finally, she acknowledged that this would take patience and isn’t something that can be faked (James 1:22).
To make God proud (Law #3 - Exodus 20:7), these students are implementing what it looks like to uphold God’s reputation. They are learning to recognize that their efforts to become effective problem solvers can only come from God’s presence in their life, their knowledge of the word of God, and their ability to walk it out in obedience. Their hard work and faithfulness to the tasks and projects given to them is a sign of their obedience.
After the class collectively said “Amen,” I was able to encourage the students that learning to be effective problem solvers according to God’s word is a lifelong practice. The adults around them engage in problem solving every day and we are prayerful in our considerations along these lines as well. I pray that they can continue to hold this type of reliance on the Lord as they are becoming the people that God needs in the world.
After this wonderful moment, students dove into their art workshop developing class murals. Their first quarter project is to collectively create a mural that expresses a value that they chose from God’s word that has been highlighted during their time at the Academy. One group chose the theme of “Unity” with an emphasis on people from around the world working together. The other group chose the theme “Rise Up” and are working through the resurrection motif that comes with our school's mascot, the Phoenix.
Students are engaging in higher order thinking skills related to creating artwork that communicates a theme or concept based on their knowledge and ability to apply and analyze it. This project has required students to problem solve with measurement (more math than they would have imagined fitting into an art class), color mixing, and painting. Students are also engaging their SEL skills of teamwork and communication to effectively problem solve their project as a team. I’m seeing wonderful fruit during this first quarter of Jr. High!
Exploring the Visual, Auditory and Physical Styles of Learning: The Benefits of Various Teaching Styles
Simply put, learning styles are the different ways in which a person intakes information. While there are multiple ways to analyze this, one of the easiest ways to break this down is through our senses.
Simply put, learning styles are the different ways in which a person intakes information. While there are multiple ways to analyze this, one of the easiest ways to break this down is through our senses. Students learn through seeing, hearing, and handling the subject matters taught to them. Some children are more prone to retaining information when presented in a certain way, and thus one student may learn more quickly through hearing a teacher’s lesson while another may better grasp the concept if that same information is formulated into a graph. With that said, here is a quick breakdown of some of the learning styles and how they can be used.
Visual: Here are some ways in to use visualization to your advantage: Use multiple colored pens when taking notes to color-coordinate certain ideas, create graphs, charts, webs, and illustrations to depict the information you were taught, make a mind-map to see how various ideas connect to each other, or put facts on images and make a review collage.
Auditorial: Some people prefer learning through hearing the information, so here are some study ideas: Listen to energizing but not distracting music while studying, memorize facts by putting them to the tune of a popular song, download lectures and re-listen to them in the car on the way to soccer practice, read through your notes out loud, or take turns with a study partner re-teaching each other the information by putting it in your own words.
Physical: Get moving! This style of learning requires you to use your body: Act out what you are trying to learn as if rehearsing for a play, read your notes while walking or chewing gum to keep your subconscious busy with movement to help your mind focus on what you need to memorize, put choreography or dance moves to the information you are trying to memorize, or place index cards of facts around the room and connect them with string. Anything that gets your body moving in sync with your brain as you digest the information can be beneficial for a kinesthetic style of learning.
For rather obvious reasons, the smelling and tasting methods are rarely used. While delicious, writing your notes in icing on a cake and then eating it is neither practical nor efficient, even if you do technically digest the information.
What’s a way to wrap all of this into one useful study tip: draw your notes. Edutopia explains how drawing while notetaking can increase retention rates by utilizing multiple learning styles at once. The student is intaking the information audibly by listening to the lecture; by depicting the information in charts, symbols, or pictures, they are constructing visuals; and by using their hands to draw, they are keeping their body physically active.
While certain learning styles may come easier to some than others, we should avoid pigeonholing anyone to a specific style. If not understood correctly, a student may lay blame on the way a topic was conveyed rather than trying to take responsibility for trying extra hard to understand the concept. Rather than looking to strengthen a weakness, they may turn it into a handicap. This may be why the developer of the multiple intelligence theory, Howard Gardner believes it best to leave behind the term “learning styles,” even though he does highly encourage educators to “pluralize” their teaching methods.
SOURCES:
Northern Illinois University Center for Innovative Teaching and Learning. (2020). Howard Gardner’s theory of multiple intelligences. In Instructional guide for university faculty and teaching assistants. Retrieved from https://www.niu.edu/citl/resources/guides/instructional-guide
“Howard Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences.” Northern Illinois University. (visited 24 March 2022)
Cherry, Kendra. “Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences.” VeryWellMind.com. July 28, 2021 (visite 24 March 2022)
https://www.verywellmind.com/gardners-theory-of-multiple-intelligences-2795161
Terada, Youki. “The Science of Drawing and Memory.” Edutopia. 14 March 2019. (visited 4 April 2022)
New Year, New Logo: Here’s what it represents.
We gave our school logo a fresh look for the start of our 10th year! Here’s the meaning behind the design.
Our logo just got a wonderful makeover for our 10th year, and we couldn’t be more excited about it. This emblem shows off some core values of our school. The new logo is a silhouette of a phoenix head in front of five blue flames, all above an open book. It looks amazing, but what does it mean? Well, let us explain…
The Flames:
The five blue flames are representative of the five goals set in our mission statement, the first of which is providing holistic education. There are also five categories which make up holistic education: academic, emotional, social, moral, and spiritual. The next is implementing this holistic education to teach children how to be responsible, kind, and ethical neighbors. The last three also deal with how we strive to shape students into being ones who are competent persons, who are globally conscious, and who are historically relevant.
The Phoenix:
The Phoenix serves as the school’s mascot, but was chosen so due to what phoenix’s are known best for: resurrection. We believe resurrection is a core element of our faith in God. The resurrection of Jesus reveals that God is the final judge and that life in him can triumph even over death. It is the epitome of hope, and is essential to our walk of faith. Our desire is to instill this undying flame of perseverance in the students, teaching them to stand firm in the fact that their hope in God does not disappoint (Rom. 5).
The Book:
The open book in front of the Phoenix is from where all our values derive: the Bible. It is not a closed book left on a shelf only to serve as a reminder of ancient traditions, but it is one we constantly open to study, so we know how to maneuver an ever changing world. Through meditation and study, we derive principles and lessons that can be applied in a relevant way to a watching world, allowing us to be a light in a world too often characterized by darkness.
A special THANK YOU to Genovations Media for the fresh design. Your team is always a pleasure to work with!