Why read aloud?

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Why read aloud?. By Mariana De Luca mariana.deluca@cms.k12.nc.us. Vocabulary Development. Total words ( in millions) heard by a child by age 4. Why reading?. Poverty and Illiteracy . 70% to 82% of prison inmates are school dropouts. 60% of inmates are illiterate to semiliterate. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Why read aloud?

By Mariana De Luca

mariana.deluca@cms.k12.nc.us

Vocabulary Development

Total words (in millions) heard by a child by age 4.

05

1015202530354045

ProfessionalWorking ClassPoverty

Poverty and Illiteracy

70% to 82% of prison inmates are school dropouts.

60% of inmates are illiterate to semiliterate.

63 % of inmates are repeat offenders.

(National Institute for Literacy. Fiske, 1989. Hodgkinson, 1989, as cited in Trelease, 2006)

Why reading?

Reading is at the Heart of Education

The more you read, the more you know. The more you know, the smarter you grow. The smarter you are, the longer you stay in school. The longer you stay in school, the more diplomas

you earn and the longer you are employed—thus the more money you earn in a lifetime.

The more diplomas you earn, the higher your children’s grades will be in school.

The more diplomas you earn, the longer you live.

Why reading?

Poverty and Illiteracy are the Parents of Desperation and Imprisonment

Why reading?

National Reading Report Card

0%

20%40%

60%80%

100%

K 4th 8th 12thGrades

Reading for Pleasure

Why reading?

Why Read Aloud? To entertain To bond To inform or explain To arouse curiosity To inspire To associate reading with pleasure To create background knowledge To build vocabulary To provide a reading model

(Trealese, 2006, p.4)

Why reading?

Difficulties: Why don’t we read to children?

Solutions

“Men are cast iron, but children are wax.”

Horace Mann

Reading Environment

The child is read to on a regular basis. A wide variety of printed material is available in the

home. Paper and pencil are readily available for the child. The child’s interest in reading is stimulated by

answering questions, praising the child’s effort to read or write

Frequent visits to the library Writing and displaying stories that the child dictates.

Solutions

Enhance learning

Reading over and over (immersion) Providing role models. Superheroes –Mom,

Dad, sister Providing a meaningful context

Solutions

Expand your Child’s Attention Span

One-on-one time between adult and child Listen to their comments, questions or answers

attentively. Teach unfamiliar concepts before reading Turn off the TV and avoid distractions Select books appropriate for their age and interest.

Solutions

Why reading?

“Reading is the ultimate weapon,destroying ignorance,

poverty,and despair.”

Jim Trealease

“ What we learn in chilhood is carved in stone. What we learn as adults is carved in ice.”

-David Kherdian

References

Bauer, C. (1992). Read for the Fun of it. H.W. Wilson

Trelease, J.(2006). The Read Aloud Handbook. Penguin Books.

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