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Helping
Your Child at Home with
Vocabulary Building
Parents are the first
"language models" for
children. The language children
use is modeled, or based, on
what they hear from their
parents. Parents need to create
an environment that enriches
what a child hears. The words
he hears, he will use with
encouragement.
To start, take a look for a
moment at the words you use-and
how you use them, Children who
repeatedly hear, "I seen
it" will imitate that
language. And the probability
is great that if they speak
that way, they will write that
way.
Encourage family
discussions. Turn off the TV
and talk. One of the best
places is the dinner table.
That's one of the few times an
entire family is together. In a
sense, it's a
"captive" audience.
Set up some ground rules, such
as "No eat and run,"
and "Everyone will have
something to talk about"
during and after supper. It's a
kind of "hear and
tell" time. What to talk
about? Things going on in the
neighborhood, what happened at
school, events that are coming
up, family plans, family
decisions, et cetera. But
remember the conversation
should be pleasant and
relaxing. This is NOT the time
to bring up sins of omission or
commission.
If your child has started
formal spelling at school, post
the list on the refrigerator
door. Use those words with your
child as discussions arise.
Encourage him to use them in
his responses.
If you have a cassette
recorder, make a tape of words.
Say the word, define it, and
then use it in a sentence.
(Select words that he will find
interesting.) Better yet, have
the child do the taping.
Encourage regular use of the
tape. (If he's studying for a
spelling test, he can also
spell it on the tape.)
"Word of the Week"
is a family game-like activity.
Each person selects a word
taking turns each week. For
example, the first week it
might be Mother who writes a
word on a card and puts it on
the refrigerator door. Everyone
must use that word as much as
possible that week. The next
week it's Dad's turn, and then
the children's turn, and so on
until it is Mother's turn
again. As the words are used,
they are posted on a cabinet
door to stimulate continued
Usage.
"Ten Questions" is
a game that promotes several
teaming skills, chief of which
is reasoning with words. One
family member thinks of
something, which the other
players must guess with no more
than ten questions. The first
question always is "Is it
animal, vegetable, or
mineral?" This covers
virtually every possible thing
the child could think of. Then,
question by question, the field
is narrowed to likely
possibilities. After the first
questions, the following
questions must be asked so that
they can be answered by
"yes" or
"no."
For some youngsters,
"Ten Questions" might
be too demanding, so make it
"Twenty Questions. "
One of the values of the
extension is that additional
reasoning and logic can be
expressed. Stretch the game as
much as possible. You can show,
for example, the process of
moving from broad-based
questions to more discrete
ones. In this way, your child
will team to ask questions such
as, "Is it located in the
Northern Hemisphere?"
"Is it in the Western
Hemisphere?" "Is it
in the United States?"
"Is it land based?"
and so on. This becomes an
exercise not only in vocabulary
development but also in
geography.
Encourage the use of a
"log" or "diary.
" And Pen Pal Clubs are
easy to find and join.
Enter a subscription to a
child's magazine. There are
many of these, and they cover
practically every interest area
of children: cars, sports,
computers, the out-of-doors, et
cetera. (Information from the
articles makes an ideal subject
for family discussions.)
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