Dear Parents,
Reading is one of the most important things your child can do each day to
help him or her succeed. If children are not reading books at their own level,
however, they are defeating the purpose of reading at all. As I have talked
to you during conferences, many of you have asked for some guidance in helping
your child find appropriate books. I have pulled together a list with help
from the students. Although I have not read each book listed below, it came
either from a student recommendation, from a reliable teacher research book
list, or from my own personal experience. Please look over the tips on how
to help your child find a "Just Right" book and over the book list.
— Mrs. Parks
Tips to ensure your child is reading a "Just Right" book:
- Have your child use the "five finger test" to see if the vocabluary is
just right. (Your child reads one whole page from the middle of the book
and counts the number of words he or she stumbles on and doesn't know. If
it is more than five it is just right. If he or she gets them all or misses
only one or two the book is just right.)
- Help your child look through the book for the size of the print and the
number of pictures — these should be similar to other books your child has
successfully read or similar to the books on the list below.
- Encourage your child to read the back cover or inside fly of the book before
beginning reading to determine whether the book would be interesting — it
is ok to abandon a book occasionally, but not every week!
- Encourage your child to read at least the first few chapters before deciding
to abandon a book — some books may have a slow beginning.