What It Is:
The Reading Game at รีวิวเกม combines a memory card game, picture flashcards, and storybooks to make learning to read exciting for kids who are just learning to read or who are struggling with reading. Six storybooks with varying levels of difficulty, three image flashcards, and six sets of ten memory cards are included with each book.
The easiest level cards, flashcards, and storybooks are used to begin. Play a simple memory match game with the cards to locate matching words, and then read the text behind the photos on the flashcards to reinforce your learning. Read the storybook once the youngster is comfortable with all 30 new terms. Then repeat the process for the remaining five difficulty levels. The Reading Game is for two or more players, with at least one tutor, instructor, or parent present.
Is it enjoyable?
This game provides a pleasant challenge for children who are learning to read or who require assistance with their reading skills. We enjoy that each difficulty level has three ways to play and that the phrases youngsters have learned are reinforced frequently throughout the game.
For Whom the Reading Is Intended:
The game is for two or more players who are at least four years old. It's designed for new and struggling readers. What to Keep in Mind It's great if a parent or instructor plays along with a youngster to ensure that he or she doesn't advance in the game before he or she is ready.
Review of Events
Reading is one of the most valuable skills one may acquire throughout one's lifetime. Thinking back to how I learned to read, it's clear that my son and daughter are learning to read in a totally different way. Companies, as well as many educators, have come up with fun new ways to get kids to interact and learn to read over the years. As a mother, some of my proudest memories have been watching Benjamin read a full book and seeing him pleased with himself. We played a game called The Reading Game over the weekend that allowed him to play a game with his parents while also being instructive.
Benefits:
Students will read the first reader once they have mastered the vocabulary and sentences. Black-and-white illustrations are used to illustrate the readers. The drawings have an unusual style for readers. Because the images typically have dark coloring and depict ferocious-looking animals, they strike me as a little scary for young readers.
All six reader sets work in the same way: they introduce new words, then have students read the sentences and readers review all previously taught terms. There is a file called "Test Sentence Assessment" that contains sentences that are identical to those on the captioned image cards, but with slightly altered language and no capitalization or punctuation at the beginning or conclusion of sentences. It's possible to use them to educate your child on how to read words when they're strung together, then introduce them to the properly formed phrases on the captioned picture card, but it's not required.
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