Thanks to Nancy Carswell for praising the method used
"The Anchors and Sails reading method teaches letter sounds rather than
letter names. Really, when you think about it the letter name "h" is not
used for reading; it is the letter sound "huh". Preschoolers are eager
learners especially when it means one-on-one time with a caring person.
The method is very well thought out. The method begins with only lower
case. After introducing seven consonants and a vowel, children can read
words like sat, hat, and mat. It is also very visual with a poem to help
reinforce the connection between the letter sound and its mnemonic. One
of the lines is 'muh is for mittens'."
Carswell's son learned to
read with the program and Carswell is now using it for her grandson.
She finds the method easy to use with the toughest thing being to
remember to use the letter sound instead of the name. She finds it
enjoyable as there are many opportunities each day to encourage
literacy. "This method makes sense and with a small investment of time
we can give our preschoolers the gift of literacy."
nanaexplainstheletters
Friday, September 7, 2012
Thanks for the review!
Dr.Nea Stewart-Dore, editor of Rotary
International's LitRAG has said
"Let me compliment you on your gently paced, logically
progressed and demonstrably concrete demonstration via video, of how you
introduce alphabetic principles/ symbol-sound relationships to early literacy
learners."
Thanks for the Facebook comments!
The Center for Parenting Education
Want a fun and easy way to help your young children learn to read? Watch "Nana explains the Letters" to get started.
Therese Mambuca Tiger
I love the way she looks at what makes sense from the child's perspective. Makes me wish I had a 3 year old again
The Center for Parenting Education
Want a fun and easy way to help your young children learn to read? Watch "Nana explains the Letters" to get started.
Therese Mambuca Tiger
I love the way she looks at what makes sense from the child's perspective. Makes me wish I had a 3 year old again
Thursday, August 2, 2012
I began teaching school in 1970 and was assigned grade 7-9
classes. It was exhilarating to have a
few hundred students, 30 at a time and to try to make English and French,
creative writing and health interesting.
Yet I noticed that a few each year always fell between the cracks, were
not having a success experience at school and the problem was usually that they
were not reading well. Problems reading
held them back in nearly every subject, even in the written tests for physical
education.
Not being able to
read well was also pretty hard on their self-esteem and to hide their problem a
few by grade 7 were acting up in class and by grade 9 were dropping out.
We have done a lot to try to fix that over the years but the
memory of the heartbreak some kids had stayed with me.
A few years later when I had my own children, I noticed how
logically toddlers' brains worked.
Maybe there was a window there I could use to ensure that for them school would
be a positive experience. I watched closely how they named their toys, how
logically they spoke. It occurred to me how difficult reading must seem to
someone who expects such logic.
I had the idea of
introducing letters simply as new toys, a new one a day and creating stories to
explain the shape and sound of each
letter. I wanted to enter the child's world and make each letter a character
with a personality. If I showed English at its logical best, maybe I could help
my kids transition into putting those letters into words in a way as natural as
learning to walk. It worked.
The gentle lessons have been sold in workbook and DVD form for some time. My children even acted in the films when they were young, and my brother-in-law filmed it, edited the film and added animation. I called the method Anchors and Sails. My slogan is "We give children anchors of love and affection. We give them sails when we teach them to read".
The gentle lessons have been sold in workbook and DVD form for some time. My children even acted in the films when they were young, and my brother-in-law filmed it, edited the film and added animation. I called the method Anchors and Sails. My slogan is "We give children anchors of love and affection. We give them sails when we teach them to read".
I tutored the course
for neighborhood kids and then got orders for it from parents, grandparents,
childcare centres, nurseries all around the country and then into the US, the UK and China. Early graduates are now adult, many reporting back very positive
school and career experiences. My own four children who took this course are
now in professions of journalism, medicine and law.
Now that the method has a great track record, and because I
am a grandma, I have decided to put the whole alphabet course online for
free. It is filmed in 27 short lessons
each 3-5 minutes long.
I call this online version "Nana explains the
letters".
The method is unique, moving gently to teach all the letters and giving skills to sound out hundreds of words. It is a resource parents, grandparents, nursery schools and childcare centres may appreciate.
Enjoy!
http://thehomeschoolmagazine.com/Homeschool_Reviews/reviews.php?rid=604
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
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