3 Simple Tips to Help Your Child Become a Better Reader

Here's a video showing how a 2 year old toddler can learn to read:
Would you like to know how it's done? Click here to find out.
As parents, you are the most important teacher for your children. You will introduce your child to books and reading. Below we have 3 simple tips to help you teach your child to read.
Reading Tip #1: Teach Letter Sounds.
When you begin teaching your child to read, most parents will start with the alphabet letter names; however, the best approach to take - backed up by real science and research - is to teach your child alphabet letters and sounds at the same time. Studies have shown that children learn best when they are taught the letter names and letter sounds at the same time. In one study, 58 preschool children were randomly assigned to receive instructions in letter names and sounds, letter sound only, or numbers (control group). The results of this study are consistent with past research results in that it found children receiving letter name and sound instruction were most likely to learn the sounds of letters whose names included cues to their sounds. [1]
To learn more, we have this discussed in great deail here.
Teaching Tip #2: From Left to Right

This is why it's important to emphasize with your child that the proper reading order should be from left to right, and top to bottom.
Teaching Reading Tip #3: Final Consonant Blends
Teach final consonant blends first. Teaching words such "at" and "and" can lead your child directly to learning words that rhyme with these. For example, for "at", you can have:
Lat
Pat
Mat
Cat
Sat
Bat
Spat
Chat
For "and", you can have these rhyming words:
Sand
Band
Land
Hand
Stand
Bland
Brand
Grand
and so on...
You can start teaching blends once your child has learned the sounds of some consonants and short vowel sounds. You don't need to wait until your child has mastered the sounds of all the letters before teaching blends.
Learning to read is a long process, but it doesn't have to be a difficult process. Broken down into intuitive and logical steps, a child as young as two years old can learn to read, and older children can accomplish even more.
>> Click here to for a simple, step-by-step program that can help your child learn to read, and watch a video of a 2 year old child reading
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