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beginner readers


ProudGrandma
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The "Now I Am Reading" series books are colorful and fun and a big hit at our house.

 

http://www.amazon.com/Now-Reading-Playful-Pals-Level/dp/1584762039/ref=pd_sim_b_1

 

We also enjoyed the "We Can Both Read" books. There is a page for the parent and then a page for the child. Here is a link to the K level but they are available for level K-2.

 

http://rainbowresource.com/prodlist.php?sid=1249946953-1107804&subject=6&category=5799

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We started out with Bob books, Nora Gaydos books, and CLP readers. It just seemed like we were at that stage for a while and needed more than just 1 set.

 

Then, I bought the 1st grade and 2nd grade BJU readers. We get various other books from the library, but I like having the leveled readers on hand. I'm not planning on buying any more readers after this. We should be good to go with just the library.

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I like the "I Can Read" books. They have a starter level (My First I Can Read) with a lot of cute titles.

 

The I Can Read books (and Step Into Reading leveled readers as well) are great and are usually priced $3.99 ea. and are often 4/3 at amazon. I still buy a few once in a while and my little guy has been reading for a while. There are quite a few (usually level 3 and above) that tie in with our history studies this year and next.

 

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_b?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=My+First+I+Can+Read&x=14&y=25

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We use I can Read and step into reading - bought used at homeschoolclassifieds.com or some other place. Once I got a whole set of 60 for $20 or so on ebay.

Also she started to read Beginner's Bible - by Hanley.

She used the Bob books very little, maybe a week or so (at 4 or 4.5?). She was not impressed with those. Now she is 6.

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I like the I See Sam readers. They are decodeables that gradually increase the code in the books until they get up to 3rd grade level. What Bob books does in just 10-12 little booklets, I See Sam does with 78 books. The writing is better and so are the illustrations. The stories are a lot more engaging as well.

 

http://3rsplus.com/

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My favorites are "I See Sam" and the Nora Gaydos books.

 

But, I prefer to just quickly work through the phonics they need, then they can read anything!

 

We worked through Webster's Speller, no outside readers, in just 10 minutes a day, and my daughter was reading well by December and anything by the end of K. You can get a lot more done if you just focus on the phonics. If you do it a bit at a time, it isn't that painful. We had fun working from a whiteboard, also, my daughter and I would laugh hysterically at the more funny sounding syllables. (We did a few syllables every day.) Also, doing a bit of spelling at the same time really cemented the sounds in her brain. She was writing fairly well (although not neatly!), but you can do oral spelling or "written" spelling with magnetic letters.

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