By
Bev Jaremko
When teaching grade nine, I noticed several kids reluctant
to read aloud. I soon discovered whythey
could barely read. Their low marks in all subjects and
their later dropout were now explained. I vowed to spare
my own baby that heartbreak.
At three, he wanted to know what those marks were on
the page. I figured if he could name 26 toys he could
identify the 26 letters. But I knew that I would have
to break the task down into pieces. I decided to teach
lower case letters only so it would not confuse him.
I would teach one sound per letter for the same reason
and I would make the letter's name that same sound.
H was huh, m was muh. I entered into his world by explaining
the shape of the letters in storiess was
a snake, w was waves, m was mittens, h was a house with
a chimney.
These memory clues made it easy to recall the letters.
We studied one every few days, felt it on signs, in
wood, in plastic, in cardboard, ate it in cheese. This
was tactile experience. After 6 letters I added 'a'
which I said was half an 'apple' and it said ah.
Then we put the letters into rows and sounded out resultshuh
ah muh became ham. I recall vividly the first time he
put the letters together and sounded them out, nonchalantly.
He was reading! I rearranged them. He read the new setpat,
pam, hat. We added new letters, stories and poems and
then more combinations.
The process took about a year and he could read over
600 words. He wanted more so I invented stories of how
the letters grew upb got a new bump, h got
a new chimney. And I created stories explaining how
some letters yell "get out of the way, ay" while others
stay quietand he could read "pail, aid."
We continued until I had four volumes of books making
even exceptions logical, and he now had a reading vocabulary
of several thousand words. Best of all, he was equipped
to enter school feeling competent and excited about
learning.
Here is the poem the child learns, combining rhyme,
rhythm, visual clues and logic for the alphabet:
huh is for house
muh is for mittens
puhpretty flower
suhsnake is bitten
wuh is for waves
tuh for traintracks
ruhround the corner
ahapple stacks
buhbump on bottom
cuh is for curl
duh is for doorknob
guhlong-haired girl
nuhnail got bent
ihit jumped up
ehegg fell open right into a cup
oh is for octopus
uhunder umbrella
fuh has a funny tophe's a strange fella.
juhjust a jet's trail
kuhkite on string
luh is for ladderyou climb it in spring
vuh is for very good
yuhyarn with tail you see
zuh is for zigzagyou draw when you feel
happy
x is for crossing the street where you've been
q (kwuh) is a lady with a long dress, a queen.
If anyone is interested
in this method, its step by step rationale is given on my website at http://www.telusplanet.net/public/bjaremko.
My website to teach preschoolers
math is at http://anchorsailsmath.tripod.com
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