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My three year old has been showing some readiness to learn his letters for some time: he knows his shapes and has good phonemic awareness which he displays in some of the games we play. So we gave him a little phonics lesson on his hornbook, and have been continuing. I don't follow our practice of teaching first the alphabet and then the common letter sounds (in alphabetic order) and then reading simple words. Instead, we teach first the sounds, beginning with the vowels. Once these are mastered, we begin learning the consonants in order of frequence (m, p, d, etc.). Once the first consonant is learned, we begin "reading." Bear will practice reading the consonant vowel combinations: ma, me, mi, mo, mu, am, em, im, om, um, am, em. This means that not so much meaningless (to the child) information has to be retained before the child knows what it is all for. And review is continual as each consonant is added, and with it the ability to read not only common syllables, but words and then simple sentences.
This is essentially how I taught my daughter to read, but we used flash cards derived from The Writing Road to Reading. I prefer the hornbook. My son plays with it constantly, and he loves searching for the "a" and "e" in the alphabet, the phonics lesson and the verses printed underneath. It is his, and not so formal as flash cards. He is gaining other skills as he matches letters on the hornbook and he can do this independently. He can also try to trace the letters with a washable marker and use it like a workbook. And it is a nice, durable accommodation for the unique difference between how boys and girls approach a book (at least for my boy!).
Related Tags: literacy, homeschooling, education, hornbook, preschool, history, Jamestown