Literacy_Books_StoryTelling_1_.ppt
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Transcript Literacy_Books_StoryTelling_1_.ppt
LITERACY
and
READING
Child Development II
READING FACTS:
Learning to read requires a combination of
many SKILLS.
A child’s success in learning to read is
affected more by reading related
experiences that a child has BEFORE
entering school than the reading related
experiences a child has AFTER he/she enters
school.
Children who are READ to REGULARLY are
better readers.
Literacy is the ability to READ and WRITE.
Reading and writing are forms of COMMUNICATION.
Words are a form of COMMUNICATION.
Name 5 different sources you could use to
see words everyday:
Signs
Comic Strips
Directions of food / labels / recipes
Newspaper
Directions for Toys
Books
If a child can SEE other
people read they will learn that
READING is
IMPORTANT!
WHAT DO BOOKS TEACH?
Rhyming
Relationships
ECONOMICAL WAYS TO GET
BOOKS:
Gifts
Used Store
Yard & Garage Sales
Libraries
Trade / Children out grow
TYPES of BOOKS:
Board Books
is a type of book printed on thick paperboard.
Each page panel is a minimum of two plies of
paperboard thickness.
Picture Books
is a book in which the illustrations are as
important as (or even more important than) the
words in telling the story. Picture books are
generally 32 pages
TYPES of BOOKS:
Picture Books Cont.
long, although Little Golden Books are 24 pages.
In picture books, there are illustrations on every
page or on one of every pair of facing pages.
Chapter Books
Generally, a children's book that is long enough to
be split into chapters, yet not long enough or deep
enough to be identified as a novel, is known as a
"chapter book."
(Pictures can be real, animated or sketched)
TYPES of BOOKS:
Chapter Books cont.
Chapter books are often illustrated, but not
anywhere nearly as much as a picture book.
Chapter books tend to be particularly
popular with 7-10 year-olds as transitional
books between beginning reader books and
novels. Chapter books also tend to appeal to
reluctant readers of all ages.
PARTS of BOOK:
Author: The writer of a book, article,
or other text.
Illustrator: to explain or decorate (a
book, text, etc) with pictures
Theme / Moral: a unifying or
dominant idea/of or relating to principles
of right and wrong in behavior
Story
Telling
CHARACTERISTICS of a
Good STORY TELLER:
Voice - Change tone & pitch
Facial Expression
Eye Contact
Speed - Slow Down
Volume - Loud enough for whole group
Speak Clearly
READ STORY BEFORE
TELLING!
Be FAMILIAR with story.
Know VOCABULARY in story.
Feel the FLOW of the story.
C.R.O.W.S.
C. Completion-Fill in the blanks/Rhyming Words
R. Retell-Child tells story in own words
O. Open-Ended-Child Responds “Tell me about…”
W. Wh-?’s- What-When-Where-Who & Why questions
S. Schema-Relate to the child’s life