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    All About Grooming & Encouraging Good Reading Habits

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    • S Offline
      sunflower
      last edited by

      Err... I was from an all girls sch so my friends who liked Bobby Twins and Hardy Boys were all girls! ... and they were not tom-boy at all... :?

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      • JenniferJ Offline
        Jennifer
        last edited by

        Roald Dahl

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        • T Offline
          tamarind
          last edited by

          I made it very clear to my 5 year old girl that every day she must read a book of my choice, then she can read a book of her choice. Mommy's choices are the wonderful children's classics by E.B. White and Roald Dahl, etc. Her choices are the Rainbow fairy books. It is perfectly OK for kids to read whatever they like, but as parents we must also make sure that they read all the classics as well as books for general knowledge.


          My 4 year old boy is reading Dr Seuss books on his own. I am also a full time working mommy 😄 I make both my boy and girl read about 10 to 15 mins everyday which is sufficient for their age. The important thing is to cultivate the love of reading from a very young age.

          It is true that computer games and TV have negative effects on kids. I am going to try my best to restrict my kids' access to these things.

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          • J Offline
            jaewee
            last edited by

            Dear all


            Juz to share some gd books my 2.5yo ds likes

            1. Sunshine Classic series- we use this as core reading program
            - these are avail at Edventure.com
            - by gd luck, u may also find them at 2nd hand bookstores in Bras Basah. It’s cheaper

            2. Little Princess Series- Tony Ross (can get at Library)


            3. USBorne First Reading- fairy tales series
            - they are like our gd old ladybird books

            4. I Wonder Why - grolier Intl
            - very nice illustrations

            5. Longman Sails series
            - size of the book is nice
            - illustrations are nice
            - used by our local schools

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            • C Offline
              clare
              last edited by

              I'm looking out for interesting readers as a gift to my niece. We don't use any so I'm at a loss :? - would very much appreciate advice, TIA!

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              • J Offline
                jaewee
                last edited by

                Hi Clare


                A good set of reader- all illustrations are in real photos.. very attractive to young children ( i assume your niece is 2-6yr of age). This is something i got recently. This publisher is also being used by local schools.

                http://primary.cengage.com.au/default.aspx?et=1&ei=57&subSiteID=2&ibcClientID=6297924&ibcClientToken=6268173486416144&categoryID=487

                For the non-fiction one
                http://edventure.com.sg/Sunshine/Non-fiction/index.html

                Both items, i can source them cheap.

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                • T Offline
                  tamarind
                  last edited by

                  clare:

                  Hence my latest attempt to cultivate interest in more 'literary' stuff:
                  Island of the Blue Dolphin - imho, beautiful lessons to be learned
                  clare,
                  I know that Island of the Blue Dolphin is a wonderful book about a girl who lived alone in an island for 18 years.

                  What worries me is that in the book, the girl's 6 year old brother died after being attacked by wild dogs. Do you think this this too traumatic for a 5 year old child to read ?

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                  • K Offline
                    ksmama
                    last edited by

                    My kids find Enid Blyton Boorring plus plus plus. ( I loved them when I was young, what's wrong with them??). My older kid says it is 'old fashioned'.


                    Your kid must read pretty well at 5 to love Edward Tulane. Well my boys loved Roald Dahl. You can try Eoin Colfer. They liked some of his. Andrew Norris to them is ok. Try 'Blart I and II' by Dominic Barker. Once my kids complained through the first part of the book, they couldn't put the book down. Can try 'Here be monsters' by Alan Snow. Thick book but lots of cute interesting monsters. 'The Phantom Tollbooth' by Norton Juster. Read with him this book, it is hilarious in some parts. These are some of my choices which they have liked. They liked CS Lewis when I read to them but not on their own. Recently I have just introduced them to Neil Gaiman and Cornelia Funke. Complained through first few chapters of the latter but now quietly reading it.

                    They own choices would be the 'Super Monster' series, 'Horrid Henry', 'Diary of a wimpy kid'.... Fun to read but not allowed to read over and over again.

                    Yes I do impose compulsory reading time. if hubby and I do not see them fulfilling the required time, no DS/ computor time for the day /week. Just that I have to endure the complains if after the first chapter of the book, they still find them boring. So you see for some successes, I have lots of failures too.

                    LL does not require them to do regular book reviews at P2/P4 but they do have library time on alternate weeks, when they are encouraged to borrow books. Ocasionally, they would get the kids to write up a little on their favourite book read at LL. They do cloze passages with excerpts from books. There would be a short write up on the authors and I suppose if the kids are interested, they could look up on the books to read them fully. LL have their own writers and they would produce materials on current affairs and this is what I like because of the discussions the class would do based on the passages. They used these materials for comprehension, learning new vocab or cloze passages. When my P2 kid told me about 'credit crunch', I was :shock: \"wwahhh! boy, I am glad you know about that\"

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                    • C Offline
                      clover18
                      last edited by

                      WOW, must say I’m impressed with the variety of books your kids are exposed to! Do you have any recommendations on books for girls?

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                      • T Offline
                        tamarind
                        last edited by

                        clare:
                        Hi jaewee, thanks so much for your recommendations, will certainly check these titles out; they look interesting.


                        Hi Tamarind
                        I have the same worries about the violent death. My view is that it's probably too traumatic for five year olds, in fact I think it's even traumatic for young grade schoolers. But I had the benefit of a psychologist's advice about this and knowing my ds, I judge that he can handle it with equanimity with his maturity. That said, I also worry that parts of the book are too depressing, so I may actually can the project altogether and read something else.. perhaps Black Beauty, though the descriptions of cruelty to animals in there worry me too, argh!
                        I remember reading in another thread that your daughter read Charlotte's Web; was she sad about Charlotte's demise?
                        clare,
                        Since Charlotte is a spider, her death does not affect my girl, especially since her death was portrayed in a sad but natural and gradual manner, in ways that young children can accept. E.B. White is a superb writer. In fact, my girl has a habit of killing insects :mrgreen: When she sees an ant, she will immediately smack it with her hands. Don't know who taught her that :oops: But she shows a lot of compassion for her fellow human beings.

                        My girl has a younger brother, and she knows that it is her responsibility to take care of him. In the book, the 12 year old girl jumped ship and swam back to the island take care of her 6 year old brother who was unintentionally left behind. Even as an adult, I find it extremely disturbing that the boy was killed, and the girl was left alone for the next 18 years. 😞 I actually have not read that book yet, how did the author describe the death of the boy ?

                        I don't intend to shield my girl from reading about death or cruelty. But I guess as parents, we have to be sensitive about what effect the books will have on our children, especially when they are very young. I plan to let my girl read the Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. Although the little prince also died in the end, bitten by a poisonous snake, the description was simple : \"He fell as gently as a tree falls. There was not even any sound, because of the sand.\" The author explained that the little prince chose to die because he wished to go back to his own planet. It is very sad, but I think it is written in a way that children can understand.

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