Story Time
Ages 6 to 12 Months
General Lesson Plan
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Materials
Select children’s stories with emphasis on ONE of the Emergent Reader’s Literacy Skills.
You may RE-READ a story to help build fluency
OR
read a NEW STORY to help build vocabulary.
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Step 1 of 3
SELECT a children’s story that supports one of the Emergent Reader’s Literacy Skills to help build a strong literacy foundation.
EMERGENT READERS LITERACY SKILLS
Picture Support: illustrations make sense with the words being read
Natural Language: language that evolves and develops naturally
Wide Letter Spacing: this allows a young child to visually see individual letters and how letters are grouped into actual words
Familiar Concepts: This allows an emergent reader to understand the story and make connections between the story and themselves
Repetitive: phrases are repeated throughout the story
Alliteration: words beginning with the same sound (Focus Sounds)
Rhyming: words ending with the same vowel & consonant sound (Focus Sounds)
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Step 2 of 3
PREVIEW the story with a Picture Walk. Explore the story through a Picture Walk, orally sharing what you see on the pictures and illustrations.
For a young child in this age group, PREVIEWING a book is more important than the actual reading of the words.
CONCEPTS of PRINT: As your child grows, help build an understanding of:
that print carries a message
how to hold a book
front & back cover
directionality
top to bottom
left to right
turning pages right to left
letters, words, & sentences
Other Interactive Activities:
ask them questions
“What do you see on this page?”
“Can you find the _____ on this page?”
make it personal - talk about connections to your child
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Step 3 of 3 (OPTIONAL)
“READ” or “SING” the story with expression. Use the pictures to tell the story. It’s OKAY to not read all the words, or any words at all, at this stage.
Young children have a short attention span - it’s OKAY if only a page or two is shared. As the child grows, so will their attention span.
If the child begins to interact with the story, sharing ideas or making connections, allow them to share.
EX: “Oh, that looks like our kitty.” or "I like the blue color of the house.”
Acknowledge their comments, then continue until the child is done.