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Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 383
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Joined: Aug 2009
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DD is flying through the firts set. She mostly just reads the words, but occassionally she will sound one out out loud. When she doe she then goes back to the start of the sentence and reads it all again without sounding them out. It's amazing that she just seems to know some words, though I watch her pause and I figure she is figuring it out in her head.
So for those of you who have used them, do you just progress to the next set when your child finished the first box? Did you have them rea all of them more then once or just let them progress as they wanted? Right now she usually just reads one and then wants to move on to the next one, but will later go back and oick out an earlier one to read to someone else.
DD actually just took one next door to read to the neighbors 4 month old LOL.
Thanks
DD6- DYS Homeschooling on a remote island at the edge of the world.
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Joined: Jun 2009
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I was JUST going to ask about beginner reading books!  Lucas LOVES books (just got up from his nap and there are books all over the floor again, he was "reading" to himself). I'd like some examples of basic picture/word books that actually have a story to them, what are the bob books?
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Joined: Sep 2008
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I'd like some examples of basic picture/word books that actually have a story to them, what are the bob books? Off topic from the thread title, but let me put in a word for Oxford Reading Tree Songbird Phonics (not to be confused with other ORT series). These are (or many of them are? I forget) by Julia Donaldson, who wrote many famous children's books such as The Gruffalo. It shows! DS6 still insists that they all live in his bookshelf and occasionally reads them. He already enjoyed them at just-3 and I don't remember any of them being "scary", which was a recurrent problem with books more generally.
Email: my username, followed by 2, at google's mail
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Joined: Nov 2009
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DS4 taught himself to read with Bob books when he was 2. I literally just bought him more when he asked for them, so we ended up with the first three sets pretty quickly. Since then he has progressed on to other books and hasn't asked for more Bob books, even though he knows there are another 2 sets that he hasn't read.
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Thanks  DD loves them right now because she can read all the words. She gets frusterated with books that I have to help her with even if she knows most of the words, so with the Bob books she sits by herself and reads. Today I was at my neighbors in her kitchen an we walked back into the living room and DD was reading the Bob book to her daughter. She later told me "I told Joy 'I am going to sit down and read you a book'" LOL We also point ut words when we read to her, well usually she wil ask why a word is something ...for example....why is you not your as it looks like you, so I tell her it changes when you put the r at the end, and then she instantly recognizes the word from then on. Today it was why is the word off, off and not of. Why did they add an extra f? LOL. I think I'll get the next set this weekend.
DD6- DYS Homeschooling on a remote island at the edge of the world.
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Joined: Dec 2009
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I got the BOB books for my DD when she was two and she read them, but them just wasn't into wanting to read them so I just put them on the shelf. She really doesn't like to read books aloud to me which makes me so sad. I'd love to sit and listen to her. She can read almost any word I put in front of her and if asked, will read sentences for me, but we don't try to sound words out or do anything to help with her reading because it just seems she wants to do things on her own without my interference.
Last edited by TwinkleToes; 01/16/10 08:59 PM.
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Joined: Aug 2007
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My kids never took to the Bob books as toddlers. They preferred Sharon Gordon's early reader books, and were really excited about books like the Scholastic I Spy series intended for older kids. One of my kids particularly loved nonfiction books at that age, and read some fairly dry books intended for adults.
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Joined: Apr 2009
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I'll second the I Spy series. DD went through them like lightning, but they were great while they lasted.  She always hated Bob books, but I think that's because her sight word vocabulary was so huge that she could read much more interesting books long before she was ready to start sounding words out.
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My son strongly disliked Bob books, as he would not read anything that didn't have real plot or more sophisticated humor. Basically, if I thought it was boring, he thought it was boring and didn't want to bother. There are some early reader books out there that fit the bill, but not many--AT ALL! I think it's one reason my son was not an early reader--he would just rather I read him things that were really interesting. He did like some of the Brand New Readers series, especially the books with Worm as the main character--they are quite funny. He also adored the Elephant and Piggy books (by Mo Willems) when he was slightly more advanced. My son was not one with a high sight word vocabulary early on, but he still loathed the Bob books b/c he just didn't find them entertaining.
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My son strongly disliked Bob books, as he would not read anything that didn't have real plot or more sophisticated humor. Basically, if I thought it was boring, he thought it was boring and didn't want to bother. There are some early reader books out there that fit the bill, but not many--AT ALL! I think it's one reason my son was not an early reader--he would just rather I read him things that were really interesting. Interesting - same thing here with both kids. DS wouldn't read willingly until he hit 3rd or 4th grade level (which he seemed to hit overnight) and DD appears to be in the same process. DD seems to be able to read almost anything, but doesn't have the fluency to sit down and read what she'd actually enjoy yet. I have only a hand full of things she will willingly read out loud. Both kids hate leveled readers and our one set of bob books were never touched.
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