Passive Income Guide
 
International adoption articles directorysevastopol
Search: 

Articles in Home | School Issues | Reading Problems

  • Make sure that early reading is fun!  By : Ellie Dixon
    Reading is fundamental in today's society. But what a lot of today's television age children never learn is that reading is also fun! It's one thing to teach a child to read, but quite another to teach them to love reading. Here are some ways to nurture such a love ..
  • Five Ways To Make Reading Easier For Your Child  By : David Morgan
    To thrive at school and then develop the best possible career, your child needs to be an excellent reader. Just being able to read is not enough.
  • Treating Dyslexia  By : Lisa H
    Dyslexia has become a term that most people are familiar with. They believe it means reversing letters and numbers, which is true, but in my work with children I have found that it encompasses so much more than just reversals.
  • Helping Students With Reading Problems  By : Lisa H
    Reading is a difficult process. The brain must be doing several things at once in order to make sense out of the written word. Many things can go wrong when a student is learning to read.
  • Issues in Determining Learning Disabilities  By : Gary Direnfeld, MSW, RSW
    Sometimes you have to dig deep...
  • 8 specific ways you can make your child a reader!  By : Deanna Mascle
    Providing positive, enjoyable literacy experiences give young children opportunities to gain the knowledge, awareness, skills, and love of learning that they need to later learn to read independently. Here are 8 ways you can provide those experiences
  • Preparing your child cognitively to read  By : Deanna Mascle
    The ultimate goal of reading instruction is to enable children to understand what they read, so reading instruction has to be about more than simply matching letters and sounds -- it also has to be about connecting words and meaning.
  • Lessons in literacy: How to raise a reader  By : Deanna Mascle
    As a basic foundation for learning to read and write, kids need strong speaking and listening skills. When you and other adults around your kids encourage them to talk, ask questions, and use dramatic play, it increases their vocabulary, allows them to hear and practice building sentences, and gives them more knowledge to understand spoken and written language.
  • When, What, and How You Should Teach Your Preschooler  By : Deanna Mascle
    One of the most important things you can do for your child is to offer an environment rich in learning opportunities. If you give your child the opportunity to learn then he will learn -- it really is as simple as that.

Copyright©2005-2007 International Adoption Articles Directory
 

Powered by Article Dashboard