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Welcome Notes from the Author

This Blog is solely private property of Hanz & TheHoneybunch.All the contents are based on the life we lead and sharing from what I learnt & read. We love homeschool and are happily homeschooling our boys aged 7, 3 and a baby for the past 7 years.

We welcome you to share as we would never stop learning because we believe the world is our classroom. Thank you.



Showing posts with label Books World. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books World. Show all posts

Friday, March 18, 2011

Where has gone our Sang Kancil & Nenek Kebayan?


Probably won't be too much to state gone are the days where little children would gather in circle and completely entertained by the amusement of the story unfolds by a storyteller.


Back then, little children will never feel restless and bored by the absence of the picture & sound box as the sound they heard from is the sound of lively voices of the storyteller, narrates any legends and tall tales.

Can you still remember the story of Sang Kancil with Buaya or Sang Kancil with Monyet? How about Puteri Bongsu, Puteri Gunung Ledang where the Nenek Kebayan always appearing? We also have our own funny tales like Lebai Malang, Pak Pandir and the clever mischief boy Si Luncai.

How pre-reading skills lead to reading success

Ever wonder how I make my boys, Hanafi & Hambali love books?

The keyword is pre-reading skills. Reading is merely a visual representation of the spoken word. And just as we teach our children to talk & the appropriate words for objects & people, we can begin early to teach our children how letters represent certain sounds & when those letter symbols are grouped, they form words.

Pre-reading activities begin early & most parents aren't even aware they are preparing their young child to read.It's all about exposing the child to both spoken & written language.Parents can set their children up for success without pushing by making sure that they have the maximum exposure to these activities.

How to teach ABC creatively & effectively




How do you teach the alphabet to your child?

Singing the famous 'ABC Song'? Point letter in ABC book? Play the ABC videos to your child?

You are in the right track and those are the same things that I did previously with my elder son, Hanafi. Below are the tools that I've used for him and currently using it to Baby Hambali too.


 

Love to Read | Techniques on instill a love of reading

  1. Encourage speech. Talk to little babies, even before they can respond. When young children want something, let them ask instead of rushing to do their bidding immediately.
  1. Starts with storytelling. Looking at a book together can be a pleasurable experience even when a child is very young. Choose a time when your little one is in the right mood. Make it pleasurable. Hold the child close and make the session short. When he has had enough and loses interest, stop at once.
  1. Provide a good example by reading yourself and always have books in the house.
  1. Buy books that small children can handle, such as cloth books and board books.

Love to Read | Reading to Preschooler


This time round, specially dedicated to read to preschooler. Please take note that reading never stops, even if your child has already independently read, keep on read-aloud to your child. This is what James J.Trelease advises that you can even still read-aloud to your teenager. And, before there is an existence of tv, people read for amusement, news & entertainment, right? Internet is there, but you are still doing what it had been done right?


Here is an excerpt or summarisation from one of the topic inside the book by Rachel Goodchild, "The Joy of Reading".

Who said Book is Boring?




Ask yourself,"Do I read?". Then ask yourself again,"Do I REALLY read?" Two self-prodded questions will obtain two different answers though it SOUNDS almost the same. Be honest with yourself.

Now, ask yourself again,"Do I want my little ones to read? Do I REALLY want my little ones to REALLY read?"

If the answer is positive, read on my chat or else just go blog-hop to others. My chat onwards specifically to those who want their loved little ones to LOVE BOOKS & LOVE READING.

It happened to me that few people did asked what types of books is suitable for their child. I came across as well in forums & blogs, parents are unsure on how to read to their child & how to make their child love reading. You can pick some guidelines from my previous 'chat' which I had covered about reading to baby & toddler, then I shared some techniques to instill a love of reading & latest was reading to preschooler. I did chat about my books collections too in general. Perhaps a comprehensive show & tell of what types of books available for children can provide some insights to you.

Books and books galore!

Sharing & sharing alike!

1) All time favourites. Well-recommended books.
**The Gruffalo**, **The Stinky Cheeseman and other fairly stupid tales**, **Something Else**, **Goodnight Moon**, **Chicka Chicka Boom Boom** (VCD available as well & we love it!!) & **Guess How Much I Love You**, **But Not the Hippopotamus**.

The Power of Books by James J.Trelease

The writer Graham Greene once observed that books are their most powerful in childhood. He is right, of course, for it is then that our minds are most open and innocent, when we are ready and willing to believe that animals can talk, lost children can fly, houses can be made of gingerbread and that when our punishments are done our dinners will be waiting for us (and they will still be warm)

Of course, against modern technology's immediacy - like videos moving thousands of frames a second - the pace of a book pales by comparison. But, "the race is not to swift". Aesop reminded us, as when you compare a book and video in long-range power, it is book that wins. Nothing short of another living, loving human being can equal a book in its power to simultaneously move, influence, change, heal, excite, educate, and inspire. Blessedly, books come already assembled, no batteries needed, don't go out of style, leave none of candy's cavities, and wear out less easily than toys.

But initially the book is not enough. Books and people do not have Velcro sides. We do not naturally attach to each other. In the beginning there must be a bonding agent - parent, relative, neighbour, teacher, or librarian - someone who attaches book to reader. Just as there is no player in the National Basketball Association who was born wanting to play basketball or read must planted by someone outside the child. Psychologists call such a person the "significant other"

The significant others need not be educated or even come fro privileged circumstances but they serve the world mightily. Take, for example, the poor Danish shoemaker and his son. The father eventually would die mentally ill, his wife would die illiterate and an alcoholic. The son, however, would die one of the world's most widely read and beloved authors - Hans Christian Andersen. How the boys rose above his impoverished childhood can be attributed largely to the long winter nights he spent with his father - reading from the ARABIAN NIGHTS and afterward acting out the stories with cut-outs in toy theater the father had made.

Then there was the troubled Minnesota teenager, returning to his dysfunctional and abusive home one night after selling newspapers at a local hospital. With the temperature reaching twenty-below, the boy saw the warm glow of the library. His father was millitary and thus the boy never spent more than five months in any one school, always at the bottom of his class. In the library that night significant other came in the form of a librarian who offered the ill-clad teen a book, promising another whenever he was done. No performance tests, no dioramas, no grades, just a book to read and enjoy, down by the apartment furnace with a quart of milk and a box of cookies, a book to crawl into and escape the fury of this parents' arguments upstairs. One book led to another and another, until he was hooked for life. By the time that teenage, Gary Paulsen was 50 years old, he would be the award-winning author of more than 100 books, but one can only wonder what might have become of him were if not for the librarian.

Imagine how much poorer the world would be were it not for Mrs. O'Connor, the volunteer who came in each Saturday morning to read aloud to the boys at the English Boarding School. For one boy, the unachieving 10 years old who hated school and books, her weekly visits would give his first real taste of books as wonder and pleasure, instead of test and measure. One year of her Saturday morning readings and he was hooked on books. But, without Mrs. O'Connor the read, the world of books might never have had Roald Dahl the writer.

Some people would have believed that the old days were better in every way than today. Not so, certainly not in children's books, which have never been as wide and glowing as they are today. Three times as many books are being published today than a decade ago, and almost all in glorious colours. Hundreds of children's bookstores (largely unheard of just two decade ago) dot the American marketplace, the chain bookstores have burgeoning children's departments that are crowding the adults, the long grey line of school textbooks is giving way to intelligent and enchanting trade books in the classrooms, and library usage by families has children's librarians wearing the broadcast smiles in decades.

But none of it will add up too much without that significant other who brings child and book together in a grip that lasts a lifetime. In a sense, it is what Plato was talking about when he said it is the responsibility of people who carry torches to pass them on. The magnificent torch of literacy has a flame that must be fanned by moving it from generation, from one reader to another, from an adult to a child.
Books are a powerful tool. In creating a nation of readers, we create the torch bearers and leaders of tomorrow.


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