Sunday, March 30, 2025

Adventures in Reading

     I believe it was Charlie Brown who said, "Reading is an adventure that never ends."  I can vouch for that personally as a reading tutor for kindergartners at a local school.


    The drill is this: there is a two-person desk in the hall outside the classroom. Kindergartners come out one by one with a book drawer from which they can pick out a book to read to me. The teacher also gives me collection of books appropriate for beginning readers. Most kindergartners however like to select a book from their own drawer.


    Sometimes the books they want to read are either long or too difficult for them to read. They may be books their parents read to them, or books that were given as a gift from a relative. One boy pulled out a board book with birds on it.


    I thought, “How hard can a board book about birds be?” I expected words like jay, robin or crow. When he opened it, I saw that each two pages featured birds of a specifict color. But instead of easy birds like robin jay and crow, it was kingfisher, whooping crane and bullock's oriole. I've never even heard of a bullock's oriole.


    Yet, the boy read the birds on the first few pages without a hitch. A gifted reader, I thought. But as he turned more pages, he began to struggle. I realized that he probably had memorized the first few pages. So we began to sound out the more difficult birds. And there were flocks of them. Birds of every color. Birds I'd never heard of. I don't think Audubon knew all these birds, certainly not as a kindergartner. A-v-o-c-e-t. I couldn't even begin to pronounce that one.


    And how many different green and brown birds are there? Enough to fill four pages of this kid's board book.


    So time's up and I ask this kid to send out the next student. The kid told me, “She probably won't come out. But I'll try.” Sounds like I might be in for another reading adventure.


    A girl did come out with her book drawer, sat next to me and pulled out a big book. Oh, oh. “Can I see that?” I asked reaching for the book to see if it was more age appropriate than that bird book. But the girl pulled the book away, turned her back to me and opened the book, starting to say something but just then the hallways became very busy and noisy.


    That went on for a while but I could see the girl turn the pages and she seemed to be reading though I couldn't hear her. Then the hall traffic died down and I peeked over her shoulder. Turns out she wasn't reading at all. She was making up conversations between the illustrated characters in the book.


    I pointed out a word and asked her what it said. “I don't know,” she replied. So I sounded it out for her very slowly. “I know what your mouth is saying,” she rebuked me in a huff. But I eventually got her to read some on her own. Then I asked her to send out Davy D, the next kid on the list. “I don't know who that is?” she said. So we both went back to the classroom and I told the teacher she did not know who Davy D was. “It's Daveed,” the teacher responded (Davyd was on my class list but I had misinterpreted it).


    As Charlie Brown says, the adventure never ends.

5 Comments:

Blogger Lee said...

Hi Dave...what a wonderful activity you're involved in doing.
Good on you!

I think it is most important that children are introduced to books...paper books...at a young age. Particularly more so nowadays with all the devices available to kiddies. I feel it is not good for them to have their eyes clued to such devices all the time.

When I was a very young child I was introduced to books, and loved them immediately. As an old girl these days, I still love them.

Congratulations to you for a wonderful job you are doing.

Take good care. :)

1:15 AM  
Blogger Big Dave T said...

LEE--Thanks. We've babysat our 20-month-old grandson this past week and he's always bringing me his favorite books so I can read them to him. Fortunately they're very short. So short in fact that I have all of them memorized now.

My wife's friend is cruising New Zealand and Australia right now. The highlight for her was Milford Sound and she went to Habbiton too. I'm not familiar with either place though.

5:35 AM  
Blogger Carine-what's cooking? said...

What a wonderful thing you're doing Dave! We've been so busy with some good/bad stuff and that has kept me pretty well out of the loop on so much! Glad I could catch up a bit before leaving on our yearly anniversary trip!

11:45 AM  
Blogger Lee said...

I hope your wife's friend enjoys her visit to New Zealand and my country, the Land of Oz. :)

I've only been to New Zealand once...to Christchurch on South Island. I loved my visit, and I had a great time. Our Kiwi neighbours are good folk who enjoy a good time, and they are very welcoming.

1:44 PM  
Blogger Big Dave said...

LEE--They sound like they're having a wonderful time. I know they're looking forward to the Australian leg of their tour.

CARINE--Wow, haven't heard from you in a while. I'll have to stop by your blog and see what's going on. Coincidentally, my wife and I are beginning a three-week cruise vacation starting tomorrow.

6:29 PM  

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