When kids are first learning to read, one of the things they need are some basic sight words under their belt. My son {age 4.5} has learned about 25 sight words this past year through the PreK reading curriculum I created for him. This summer, I want to expand and review that sight word learning without being too structured.
One way we will do this is by composing emergent readers together about him and the things he loves. There are many reasons why this concept works well. For one, it is all about the child. The majority of readers, even reluctant readers, will stick with something longer when the topic is of high interest to them {and what is more interesting to a child than a story about himself?} Secondly, this idea is highly adaptable to meet the developmental needs of the child {most writing activities are}. I will include some of those adaptations at the end of the post. But for now, I want to share how we made our first emergent book of the summer.
Steps to Writing Books with Your Child
1. Ahead of time, I chose the predictable sentence I wanted for this particular book: “I like to…”. {For young readers, predictable text like this works well because of the repetition of words.} I asked him to pick several things he liked to do and he did them. While he was doing them, I took pictures of him. Painting, jumping, playing his favorite bird game, coloring…you name it.
2. I saved all the pictures to our computer. He chose the pictures he wanted to use and I printed them each onto a separate piece of paper to create a book.
3. I modeled the first sentence, “I like to color”. He listened as I talked through my sentence. It’s great for kids to hear us think out loud as we read and write. This is one way they gain the strategies they need to read and write with independence. An example of what I said, “I’m going to start writing over here on the left side of the paper because that’s where you start with reading and writing.” Think basic. Think simple.
4. We worked on the other sentences together. “I like to jump.” “I like to play.” And so on. I let him take the lead and write as much as he wanted. When he didn’t want to write any more, I helped out. To keep him active in the writing while I had the pencil, he continued to help me sound out words. Writing books with kids is a great way to model spacing, capitialization, listening for phonemes {sounds in words}, and other foundational reading and writing skills.
5. Once all the sentences were written {this took two days}, we worked on the title page; made from colored construciton paper of his choice. Coming up with a title was a bit tricky for him, so I offered him several choices. He picked, “Things I Like to Do”. He added “by {his name}” to the title page as well.
6. We stapled the book together and he used our recycled bubble wand to read it to me. The book now has a home in his independent reading bin {a bin of books he can read himself, mainly from Reading the Alphabet}. If you don’t have a bin, displaying the books your child has written among the other books on the shelf or in a special space shows him you value his work as a writer.
Adaptations for Writing Books with Your Child
- Instead of taking photos, ask your child to illustrate the pictures. This works particularly well for those children who love to draw.
- Adapt the predictable sentence based on the words your child already knows or needs to know. Start simple. Sight words need to be introduced slowly with children just learning to read.
- Use life experiences to create your sentences. For example, after a trip to the zoo, you could write the predictable sentence: “I saw a…” filling in the different animals your child saw that day.
- Make it as long or as short as you’d like. Our book was five pages long because that’s all his attention span could handle.
- Break up the activity into different segments. The entire book does not have to be completed in one sitting. Break it up over a few days, especially if you’re asking your child to do most of the drawing or writing.
- For children who are not ready to do the writing, do it for them. But require that they be your helper, listening for sounds {phonemes} in words, helping put the space in between words by placing their finger there as a space holder, or drawing the period at the end of the sentence. Sometimes children just aren’t ready to write the entire sentence. Ask them to write the letters they do know how to write.
- For more advanced readers/writers, mix up the sentences a bit instead of making the book totally predictable. For example, “I like to jump./I can jump very high./I jump the highest on my trampoline.” etc.
Predictable Sentence Starters
As a head-start, here are a few sentence starters that work well for writing predictable books with young readers, based on early sight word lists:
- The _______.
- A ______.
- I see the ______.
- I see a ______.
- I can _______.
- I like _______.
- I like to ______. {example I used}
- I saw a ______.
- I am _______.
- My _______.
- Look at the ______.
Becky Spence is a homeschooling mama to four little blessings. She is passionate about teaching, specifically literacy. She is the author of This Reading Mama, where she shares reading and writing activities as well as literacy curricula and printables. You can connect with her on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Google +.
Becky says
Thank you for this opportunity!
rebecca at thisfineday says
Great post!! I have a couple of making books with your kid ideas that I’ve done as well! I love how immediately gratifying this book is and how the child is actually writing the sentences! I’ll definitely do this over the summer as I will have a kindergardener in the fall! Thanks for the post 🙂
Here was our take on this:
Photo story book about your kids, for your kids-
http://thisfineday.com/blog/2013/5/23/make-a-storybook-about-your-kids-for-your-kids
Photo recipe book with kids-
http://thisfineday.com/blog/2013/6/11/easy-recipe-photobook-starring-your-kids
Faigie says
I love kids books. I did them for years as a teacher and as a mom. When I made them with kids in school (they illustrated and dictated to me what to write) the parents would tell me how much the kids loved these and couldn’t leave them out of their sight
Laurie says
Taught my dd to read at 3 this way. I showed her a picture book I wrote and illustrated for an old college class, then she said she wanted to write her own book, next we were making more and more 🙂 She never liked Bob books, but liked them if I made them. Some I personalize like….with her name…likes to go to the park, swing, play in sand, etc. I tried to have mostly short vowels and common sight words.