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Posted By: newmom21C Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/15/10 11:24 AM
As of right DD has a TON of books but we're always on the lookout for more. grin Anyways, pretty much all her books are some sort of story book. There's a clear story line, etc. We do have some non-fiction books that are directly related to some of her major interests too (like a butterfly book, for example).

But I know she's interested in reading, she's always pointing to words and asking what they are. She's got some sight words too and purposely looks through books that she has that has the sight words in them just to see them. I don't want to actively teach her but I do feel that it is important to give her whatever materials that she would want (ok, within reason.. I'm sure she'd love for me to buy a pool and build a playground just for her but that's not going to happen!).

We always try to encourage her interests, so I'm wondering if we should pick up some early reader books, like the Bob books? What did other parents do? Obviously, we'll continue to read a lot to her and she always sees my nose stuck in a book but I just wonder if I should try some of these books or not?
Posted By: Iucounu Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/15/10 12:13 PM
For the very early stages, we used P.D. Eastman and Dr. Seuss books, as well as the Step Into Reading Series (they're a mixed bag, but some are pretty good). My son's real breakthrough book was "Big Dog, Little Dog". One of my favorite silly early readers by Dr. Seuss, under his backwards pseudonym T. Lesieg, is "In a People House". There are others too, like the original Little Bear book by Sendak.

One thing that I wish we had done is get an early reader's dictionary. You might look into that, to encourage her to read more on her own.
Posted By: gratefulmom Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/15/10 12:55 PM
We're also big fans of Step Into Reading and the Dr. Sueuss/Eastman. Lucounu, you're the first Mom I've seen who puts those at the top of your list, too! Great minds think alike, I guess! smile

DS6 learned to read on his own at 2 from the Step books. He was a Thomas-aholic, so we had all of them. First, he would memorize the story, so when we paused at a word and pointed to it, he would fill it in. Then, we'd see him "reading to himself" in his crib at night (which of course, was reciting what he had memorized). Very quickly, though, he started recognizing those words in different stories and contexts.

Lots of people like the "Bob" books, but those bore me silly. My 27 month old can sight read a few of the early scholastics readers, but I think he too is better off with whole-language fun readers like SIR than a black-and-white book about "I see..." My mom is a reading teacher and she's also offered us Dick and Jane books, but since we don't really talk that way, I wasn't a fan.

Oh, my little one also loves Spot books and is getting lots of sight word vocab from them. He now has about 30 words he can read outside of context (ie on plain white paper), and many others he recognizes in books. We don't do formal reading programs or flash cards or anything like that, so he must be picking it up from reading the stories together. I'm a whole language fan because it's working in our house, but I'm not 100% sure exactly what I'm doing right! LOL!
Posted By: ColinsMum Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/15/10 01:18 PM
I think what books you have is less important than what your attitude is, but that said, DS loved the Oxford Reading Tree Songbird Phonics series. I bought them for him when he was reading a bit and being obviously frustrated by being unable to read whole books. This definitely went well: they have good stories (he still insists on keeping them in his book case and occasionally reads some!) and he was immediately able to read whole books which he loved. I think the moment had to be right, though: since he was actively wanting to read whole books, he leapt straight in, and we were able to maintain a policy that these were his "reading books" which were only ever read by him, not to him. I suspect that if we had got them when he wasn't quite ready for that, we might have felt pushed into reading them aloud to him and then they'd have been just another set of story books. So my gut feel is that if your DD is interested but not actively pushing her limits yet, you might want to hold off for a few months.
Posted By: Speechie Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/15/10 02:05 PM
We also read a lot of Richard Scarry books- some of them have nice little details in the pictures and loads of labels on things.
We do use Dr. Suess and P.D. Eastman as well.
I think the important thing is just to read together and that your LO chooses books she's interested in. We do library trips and Nick often wanders into the reference books for the older kids/adults. We've brought home books on 18th century tools with beautiful illustrations/descriptions, and last week it was the human anatomy as he wanted to know about bones. He LOVED seeing the pictures of the patellas, metacarpals and how they all interconnect.
Have fun! It's great that she's so eager to read! smile
Posted By: BigBadWool Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/15/10 02:12 PM
We liked to do a lot of more complicated books we read mixed with some level one readers (like the Biscuit books). I do not like the ones with the pictures with the words under them just the regular level ones. Then on occasion I would point at one of the words and let him fill in the blank.
Posted By: no5no5 Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/15/10 02:54 PM
Ha. I'll second (or fourth?) P.D. Eastman. Go, Dog Go! was one of DD's favorites at around the time she started reading. In fact, it was the book she used to first demonstrate that she had sight words. I bought it because we were out running errands all day, I forgot to bring something for DD to do in the car, and it was the best thing I could find at the used bookstore we stopped at. DD fell instantly in love with it. smile

Other than that, DD really didn't get into any of the very simple early readers. Once you get past that stage, there are some great early chapter books (e.g., Frog & Toad, Fly Guy, Amanda Pig, etc.) that I still enjoy to this day.
Posted By: newmom21C Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/15/10 08:43 PM
Thanks for all the suggestions! I didn't recognize the name Eastman at first but after looking at the books in Amazon I sure do.

I was worried about the Bob books because what I saw on the internet.. well, they reminded me the Dick and Jane books, which I'm not too enthused about. But I can definitely do Dr. Seuss and Eastman. The other suggestions you guys mentioned too look good so I'm going to see if I can pick them up cheap somewhere.


But ColinsMum brings up a good point... when do you know it's a good time to introduce these? DD certainly loves reading and finding words. She also asks me to write words for her sometimes too and definitely requests certain letters/numbers. Do you think it could still be too early, though?

Originally Posted by gratefulmom
Oh, my little one also loves Spot books and is getting lots of sight word vocab from them. He now has about 30 words he can read outside of context (ie on plain white paper), and many others he recognizes in books. We don't do formal reading programs or flash cards or anything like that, so he must be picking it up from reading the stories together. I'm a whole language fan because it's working in our house, but I'm not 100% sure exactly what I'm doing right! LOL!


DD doesn't have quite that many... maybe just under 10? But we're the same, I am WAAAYYY too lazy for flashcards! And, well, never had the desire to do them in the first place. But I think she's constantly seeing DH and myself read so that probably makes a big difference (I know it was the same for me, my dad's a bookaholic, and surprise, surprise, I was an early reader too). It's funny, she'll even take out our science textbooks and flip through them and the other day I had a shirt with differential equations and integrals on it and she was asking me what they were. laugh
Posted By: TwinkleToes Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/16/10 01:29 AM
I am not a huge fan of Bob books, but some people love them. I bought them for my DD4 when she was two and before she was three, she could read those, but had almost no interest and I didn't force them on her. She actually didn't want to read aloud to me for a long time though would slip and read my emails aloud or I would catch her reading and knew she could read complicated words etc. but she is just willing to do it now. I would pick up early readers, but she turned her nose up at them. We go to the library and pick out stacks of books each week so we have a huge variety. Many picture books work well as early readers and have more diverse vocabulary.
Posted By: Val Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/16/10 03:20 AM
I used Bob books with two of my kids. My daughter liked the first four sets but not the fifth one (some of the stories made no sense).

I thought that the first set was very good for a child who was really just beginning. YMMV.

Have you tried the Starfall website? I hadn't heard of it when DD5 was starting, but a lot of people here said that their kids loved it.

Val
Posted By: amazedmom Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/18/10 04:25 AM
DD loves DR Seuss and P.D. Eastman, She also Loves the Frog and Toad books, and Little Bear. She just read Mouse Soup tonight. That was a good one. Her rewards for things is getting to go pick out new books at the book store and she LOVES it. She is now though into picking out "grown up books" She has moved into 2nd and 3rd grade chapter books, but I am really having to watch thoise for appropriateness for a early 3 year old. She also picked up one of my quilty pleasure romance novels the other day and I walked into the room and caught her reading "She trembeled, her hands behind her back.....because he did that to her" Umm yep, time to start hiding them LOL or I will be explaing way to much LOL
Posted By: gratefulmom Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/18/10 12:57 PM
Val, my ds2 loved the letter section on Starfall when he was just starting to recognize his letters, but neither he nor I are fans of the sound-it-out beginning reading section. I wish they would read it properly, then sound it out, then read it properly again. By only stretching out the sounds, I think they lose context of what the words are saying. I can do that better away from the computer with real books.

amazedmom, have you looked at Magic Treehouse? DS6 started the animal ones just after his 3rd birthday and fell immediately in love. He read all of them as a 3-4 year old, and while I confess that I didn't read every one before/after him, I never found any that were ianppropriate for this age. Best of all from a mom perspective, the content is highly educational too! smile
Posted By: blob Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/18/10 01:22 PM
I second the Richard Scarry books. DS loved it before he was two - I think The Best Nursery Rhymes ever was a hit, as were the others. At the time, I wasn't thinking of reading, but he surprised us by reading out loud page after page. It definitely was whole word recognition. Anyway, we did the Dr Seuss Books much later at 5. Those definitely helped in phonics recognition. We had no other readers as DS didn't like them. Books by Julia Donaldson were also wildly popular here, as were Pamela Allen books.

http://www.juliadonaldson.co.uk/picturebooks.htm

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Dus-stripbooks-tree&field-keywords=pamela+allen&x=0&y=0&ih=9_2_1_0_1_0_1_0_0_1.88_119&fsc=-1
Posted By: Mam Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/18/10 02:19 PM
Amanda. I was just checking some for a friend (she wanted early chapter books).

Some ideas (some are simpler but she might like them, depends on her interests).
- Henry and Mudge. Very early chapter books, many kids like them (kid and dog adventures, VERY age appropriate).

- Cam Jansen series. School aged kid but age appropriate. Some 3 years old will understand enough of the school setting to make more sense of it, some won't (regardless of LOG, more to do with life experiences, exposure, etc.)

- Nate the great (simple detective like).

-Bailey School Kids. AGain, school aged children, more mischief.

- Rainbow Magic Fairies. Beware of these! They are the most formulaic ever but they are highly addictive to many girls. The good thing is that there are a ton of them...
Posted By: Skylersmommy Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/18/10 05:54 PM
We had a few favorites, Golden books were big with my dd5 when she was learning to read. I had kept all my dd25 Golden books from when she was a child and so I had as least 100 books at different reading levels from Disney type to The Pokey little puppy. Both dd5 & dd7 first read from Storybook Treasury of Dick and Jane and Friends. It's a hardcover book of about 200 pages of many stories I thought it was a perfect first reading book, they didn't spend much time with it but because it was simple but they learn how to read with flow right from the begining if that makes since. I don't remember the name of the series but my dd5 also liked Good dog, Rover and Silly Pig, it introduced 50, 100, 200 words depending on reading level. Dr. Seuss and PD Eastman were big favorites too!
Posted By: Lorel Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/18/10 06:42 PM
I like the Sharon Gordon books for very early readers.
http://www.amazon.com/Big-Opposite-...p;s=books&qid=1279478493&sr=1-11
Posted By: Trillium Re: Thoughts on early reader books... - 07/20/10 04:30 PM
We've fallen in love with the Elephant & Piggy books by Mo Willems (the Knuffle Bunny & Pigeon guy). Very simple early readers, with the best pictures ever--the characters are wonderfully expressive and the books are hilarious.

We've been checking them out from the library, since they are a little pricey for how short they are. I think there's around 12 books in the series.
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