| Please don't obsess over it. My mother tells me I wasn't even two yet when I started reading, so you see that the ability to read varies tremendously. It is very much a readiness skill. No one can make someone read if that person isn't "ready."
Ok, then. How do you get "ready"? Read to your daughter. Visit the library and bring home stacks of books that she helps pick out. Don't worry about ability level. If she is attracted to a book for whatever reason, bring it home. Set aside time maybe before her bedtime when the two of you snuggle up on the couch and read together. Change your voice to project different characters and animals. Point out things of interest in the pictures. Count things. Talk about colors and facial expressions and clothing and vehicles and other objects that are pictured. You read to her. She reads to you. Give her help as needed, but don't obsess over how she reads and how correct she might be. The main thing is to encourage her to read, to enjoy reading. Make it fun!
Other times of day, make up and tell her stories about the robin hopping in the back yard or the dog barking next door or especially stories about her--her birth, her early years, her first step and first tooth. Tell stories about her now and about her in the future. Tell stories about yourself and growing up. Get her excited about telling stories about things around her. Listen to her.
Encourage her to write. She can help you with writing grocery lists and thank-you notes to relatives and letters to grandmas. Help her write her own book and draw pictures for it. Make a front and back cover and put it in a binder or one of those plastic things for term papers.
Also, have you had her eyes checked? Does she squint when looking at things far away? Does she complain about headaches? Has she been taught phonics? If not, make sure the tutor knows what phonics are and will include them in the lessons. Knowing phonics is the best way to decode English and be able to read.
Please keep us informed about her progress. And remember, RELAX and have fun with reading. Don't make it an obligation or something one has to learn and do. |