Showing posts with label Book Reveiw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Reveiw. Show all posts

Monday, February 15, 2010

52 Books in 52 Weeks Challenge


Gasp!

I just found this blog and am getting chills at the possibilities. I love to read.....no let me rephrase that, I am addicted to reading and to books. Just ask my DH, he'll tell you.

I blame my mom really, ever since I was a child she would buy a book and then crack it open to smell the inside....you know that "new book smell". Ahhh, nothing quite like it and yes, I do the same:) She also took great care to pick out the perfect book for Christmas to give to each of her children, a practice that I am doing my best to emulate.

So I'm taking this challenge and my only goal is not to get obsessive with it. Got to remember, slow and steady wins the race, I don't need to read 52 books this month:)

Go ahead and join yourself.....you know you want to
52 Books in 52 Weeks

Jessica

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Reading Lessons


Thanks to the information shard by Penny Gardner our reading lessons this year have been enjoyable, productive and easy.
I had been using Phonics Pathways but for our family it was not a good or enjoyable fit and I ended up avoiding it out of frustration rather than pushing through the lessons. After reading the advice given by Penny I purchased a copy of Reading Reflex and promptly devoured its concise, highly informational contents as soon as it arrived.
Not only did it fill in the gaps that I felt were missing from other programs it also exposed the areas in which my kids where not making progress but able to slide by without my inexperienced teacher eyes noticing. I have noticed the most improvement with Thomas; when teaching him using a phonics method he breezed through certain portions of it because he has a very good and well used visual memory. But on occasion I would catch him not knowing how to sound a word out and blending sounds inappropriately.
With the phono-graphix approach outlined in Reading Reflex I have been able to stop this trend and take him back to the basics of the sounds. As they frequently point out our language began not as an alphabet but as sounds blended into words. The focus is not that "A" says "c(a)t" but that this (A) is a picture for the sounds "c(a)t", (a)rrow, and (a)lter. It is very easy for children to realize that a picture can represent different things; for example a child has no problem understanding that a rose, a carnation and a dahlia are all flowers even though they look very different. In the same manner a child can easily comprehend that there are different sounds that have the same word picture.
At the beginning of the book the have a few tests that help you to know exactly where your child's knowledge base is at. Although initially this was rather discouraging to me it was also a good prognosis of Thomas's problems in reading.
Over the past several months we have continued on through each of the games in the different levels laid out very clearly in the book. This is something else that has made this book such a gold mine, we spend our time (15 mins) playing games! Each game has a stated purpose and a goal to reach but is broken down in such a way that both teacher and child find the process fun.
Initially I would spend 15 mins. 4x a week with both Thomas and Alissa but now we have found a better schedule with a reading lesson on Mon-Wed-Fri and reading practice on Tues-Thurs. They have both made great progress and are reading very fluently on their own. I will be excited to see where they test out at the end of this school year as compared with when we started.
If you have been struggling with a phonics program and don't know where to turn I would highly recommend not only Penny's article and other ideas but the book Reading Reflex as well.

I also have employed Charlotte Mason's suggestions on teaching sight words (they do exist in our language) and have found good success with that as well. While I don't advocate it as a sole approach it has been very helpful especially to give the added boost to the children's reading confidence.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Stepping Heavenward


I have just finished reading this book for the 3rd time since I first received it many years ago. It is without a doubt one of my all-time favorites and a book I consider a must-read for all women ages 16-100!
It is a fictional account of "Katie" beginning on her 16th birthday. It is written in the manner as if it was her journal and we are taken through her years of growth as a teenager, young woman, married woman, and mother.
But this is not a "today I went here" type of journal, it is the detailing of her spiritual walk and growth in Christ. I have been so encouraged and uplifted by re-reading this and it has renewed me like no other fiction book can.
Let me just share with you the recommendations from the women on the back of my book.

"This book is a treasure of both godly and womanly wisdom told with disarming candor and humility, yet revealing a deep heart's desire to know God. We need such intimate accounts, need them desperately when the word commitment is so little understood and so seldom practiced. I do not hesitate to recommend it to men, who need to better understand the wives they live with, and to any woman who wants to walk with God."
—Elisabeth Elliot

"Stepping Heavenward is the record of a woman's spiritual journey deep into the heart of Christ. This book will serve as a guide for today's Christian woman ho desires to leave behind the dull, dry indifference of spiritual mediocrity to discover the rich, deep joy of knowing Jesus more fully. This woman's spiritual journey is so inspiring. I can see how god will use it in a dramatic way in the lives of many."
—Joni Eareckson Tada





Free copy available here

Book from Amazon

Thursday, May 8, 2008

When Children Love to Learn


I simply must say something about this book. It has been so very inspirational and encouraging to me that I want to make sure as many people as possible find it and read it.
For those of you who follow the Charlotte Mason method of teaching this book is a must read. It is full of practical applications, curriculum guides, and encouraging and uplifting thoughts. It is a compilation of several teachers and authors and covers a wide range of Miss Masons teachings. I have been reading it daily for awhile now and I always feel as if I'm opening a treasure chest every time. The authors are experienced CM'ers and speak to the issues that we face in schooling our children every day.
If you can't purchase this wonderful book then by all means check your library and if they don't have it on hand then request it through InterLibrary Loan.

step by step,
Jessica

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