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Grade 2-3 Summer Reading Tips!
Your students have grown to be
great readers this year. They have gained many reading skills that will still
need to be practiced over the summer to ensure retention. Thus, It is
important to keep your students reading over the summer. Summer reading can
bridge the end of one school year and the beginning of the next.
Why
do summer reading?
Increase reading level
Individualize
reading material
Language skills
Vocabulary
Ethics
Expand World
Below you will find some tips to
make summer reading a fun experience for you and your child. Below the tips,
you will find my suggestions of great books to read for the summer. I hope
this list will help you find many books that a second or third grader would
enjoy.
I ask that your child read
everyday for at least fifteen minutes.
Some
Tips, Tips, Tips for Summer Reading!!!!
-
Keep books in the car and
make sure a good book gets tucked into sports bags and campers' backpacks.
-
Get your child his own
library card.
Take
or allow him to go to the library often browse for books and enjoy special
activities.
-
Help your child select
books on topics he is interested in and on his reading level.
A
simple rule of thumb for helping your child select books at his reading level
is to have them choose a page in the book (not the first one) and read it. If
he doesn’t know five or more of the words, then the book is too hard for
pleasure reading.
-
Have plenty of books,
books on tape, magazines, and other reading material around for kids to read.
-
Stock up inexpensive books
that can be exposed to the elements or swapped for others at camp.
-
Connect reading with other
summer activities.
For
example, read books about places you will go over the summer or things you
will be doing. Perhaps you will visit the beach or go camping, there are many
good books about the beach and camping!
-
Set goals and reward reading.
Reward
reading with more reading. If your child finishes one book, stop by the store
and let him pick out another.
-
Let your kids see you
read.
Read
the newspaper over your morning coffee, take a magazine from the rack in a
doctor's office while you wait, and stuff a paperback into your purse, pocket,
or briefcase. Your kids will catch on to the fact that reading is something
you like to do in your spare time.
-
Make reading together fun
and memorable.
Even
if your child is a super reader, they still love to be read too. You may want
to use different voices for different characters when you read to your child. Reading
together is a time for closeness and cuddling-another way to show your love as
a caring adult.
Children love to
read letters and notes you write them. Maybe have a day of no talking only
writing and reading each others notes.
-
Read it, then do it.
Does
your child want to learn magic tricks? Juggling? Computer games? There's sure
to be a book that can help him. Have your child read the instructions and then
give it a try.
Here
are some great books that second and third graders love to read!
Click
on the title to learn more!
POEMS
PICTURE
BOOKS
Flat
Stanley -- Jeff Brown
A falling bulletin
board flattens Stanley
so he is only
one-half inch thick.
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FOLKTALES
AND FAIRYTALES
FICTION
Why
Mosquitoes Buzz in People's Ears -- Verna Aardema, Leo D. Dillon
(Illustrator);
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Cam
Jansen and the Mystery of the Stolen Diamonds -- David A. Adler, Susanna
Natti
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Aliens
For Breakfast (Stepping Stone, paper) -- Jonathan
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Miss
Rumphius -- Barbara Cooney
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Dinosaurs
Before Dark (Magic Tree House 1, paper)
A tree house
that travels through time.
This is the first
book in the Magic Tree House Series.
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Horrible
Harry in Room 2B -- Suzy Kline, Frank Remkiewicz (Illustrator)
Harry is a 2nd
grader who likes to do horrible things. (Look for other Horrible Harry books.)
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The
Secret Knowledge of Grown-Ups -- David Wisniewski (Illustrator);
Parents seem to
have a lot of rules. Here you can find the "real" reason behind the rules.
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Paper
Bag Princess -- Michael Martchenko (Illustrator), Robert N. Munsch
A princess outwits
a dragon to rescue the prince she intends to marry.
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Grandmama's
Joy -- Eloise Greenfield, Carole Byard (Illustrator);
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Amelia
Bedelia and the Baby -- Peggy Parish
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Chicken
Soup with Rice: A Book of Months -- Maurice Sendak
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Junie
B. Jones Smells Something Fishy (Junie B. Jones 12, Library Binding) --
Barbara Park,
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Martha
Blah Blah -- Susan Meddaugh
A talking dog takes
action
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You
Can't Eat Your Chicken Pox, Amber Brown
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Zelda
and Ivy One Christmas -- Laura McGee Kvasnosky (Illustrator);
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NON-FICTION
http://www.teachingheart.net
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