Literacy

Finding the right books for your child
By Louise Park, Author
Louise Park is an Australian children's author andeducator and specialist in literacy instruction. Louise has taught primary school children of allages and is the author of successful resources tohelp children crack the reading code. Her fictionwork includes the best-selling children's books Harriet Clare, Zac Power Test Drives and Boy vs Beast.
So much of early reading success is about confidence and enjoyment. If children enjoy reading and feel a sense of success at it then they’ll keep doing it — and when they keep reading, their confidence and reading competency soars. But, if there are too many hard words, the reader stumbles through the story, continually stopping to tackle tricky words. The attention wanders and before you know it, the book has been put down and the chances of it being picked up again are low. So, it is absolutely critical that you find the rightbooks for your child — books that will build rather than erode reading confidence. Books that will be enjoyed, not endured. A good book for your child is a book they can read and a book they want to read. But how do you find that? There are three parts tothe perfect-book puzzle: content, readability and the child. If you get these things right then the rest will follow. These tips will help you get it right!
Content is all about finding a book they want to read:
- Content is King! If it grabs them and takes reading to them on their terms, it’s gold. Soconsider what your child is interested in. What do they do when they are not reading? Their interests and pastimes are often a great place to start when thinking about what to read. There are books about adventure, sport, beasts, dinosaurs, fairies, everyday problems, friendships struggles, outer space, warriors, computers and many of their favourite TV shows and games. Go to the early reader section of your bookshop or library and see what’s there.
- And when you get there, judge a book by its cover. We all do and the covers are designed to help you know what kind of story is inside. Involve your child in the process. Have them pick covers they like the look of and then guide them in how to assess if it is the one for them. Read the back cover blurb together and then revisit the cover armed with that information.
- Now look inside! The interior of the book, its layout and design are even more important. Is the type size what your child needs? Are there lots of small and manageable chapters to foster a sense of achievement? Are there engaging illustrations that provide reading breaks? Consider the number of words per page.
Readability is all about finding a book they can read:
- The perfect match between reader and text is a book pitched perfectly to give a childreading confidence as they build their literacy skills — it’s a book that they can be read withabout 90% accuracy. Anything harder will more likely turn them off reading. One new word in every ten ensures comprehension, enjoyment, and further building of literacy skills and vocabulary.
- The ‘Five Finger Rule’ is one of the quickest and easiest ways to gauge whether a book is too hard. Ask your child to start reading aloud a page of the book they think they want to read. If they stumble over a word, hold a finger up. Hold a finger up for every word they find tricky. If by the end of a page five fingers are up, the child has spent more time concentrating on difficult words than on reading the story and will have lost the storyline of the book. The book is too hard, at least for now.
Remember to involve your child in the process all the way if you can!
- Choose the books with them and not for them. Although your guidance in the choosing process is paramount!
- Encourage them to turn the page for you, to follow on, to help show you your place when you pretend to lose it.
- Make it special and something they look forward to. Curl up in favourite places that they associate with the sharing of a fabulous book. Or try new places, like on a towel under a tree, under a sheet thrown over the clothesline, or inside a toy tent pitched in the living room. After a while, they’ll grab a book and race there before you!
- Read carefully and deliberately. And be sure to explore the pictures with them as well as the words.
- Never underestimate the value of them following along with an audio recording. It doesn’t matter who reads as long as you are together enjoying it all.
- Read aloud to your child, read along with them, read with them. Stop and recap along the way. Ask questions about the story.
- And finally, easier said than done, try not to get caught up in other children’s reading abilities. It’s all about your child and their reading journey!
www.fivefromfive.org.au
Cassandra Elliott
Literacy Leader