Teaching Babies to Read
Reading is a complex skill which builds upon a number of other skills. For example, reading is in part a visual skill, in that it involves the ability to discriminate letters and words. But it also involves the muscular control that allows the child to explore a page from left to right and from top to bottom. It is also an auditory skill that requires the child to discriminate the basic sounds of his or her native language and eventually to begin to associate these sounds with the printed word. Last but not least, reading is a cognitive skill because it requires understanding and interpretation.
The research on reading is quite abundant and quite consistent in showing that this skill most effectively taught only after the child has attained ability to learn and to follow rules, usually the age range of five to seven. This is true because it takes years for children to acquire the many pre-reading skills required to profit from formal reading instruction. The cross-cultural research is quite dramatic in this regard. In Scandinavian countries and in Russia, reading is usually not taught until the age of six or seven. Children in these countries exhibit few reading problems. In France, with state supported preschools, reading is taught at age three and 30 percent of French children have reading problems. A recent comprehensive book on reading relates it to brain development as well as experience, but comes to the same conclusions. (Wolf 2007)
Despite the research, there are those who insist that parents can teach their infants to read, if they will only buy the magical system they have to offer. One of the first to make this kind of offer was Glen Doman (Doman 1967) with his "How to Teach Your Baby to Read". He argued that because the brain is growing rapidly during the first years this is the time to teach reading and math. (This claim always puzzles me. As a gardener one of the first rules I learned was never to prune during the growing season). Although Doman, and now his daughter (Doman 2007) have been selling the program for more than forty years, they have no follow up studies to demonstrate its effectiveness. Others (e.g., “Monki See, Monki Doo”) (Author 2007) have gotten on the same bandwagon and make the same bogus claims, e.g., “ A one year old learns better than a two year old.” Those who sell these materials offer no research or other evidence in support of their arguments. The purveyors of infant learning to read products build on parent anxieties to sell a product that is likely to do more harm than good.
The best preparation for learning to read is a language rich environment. This environment is created when you sing, talk and read to your child beginning in infancy.
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Author (2007). Monki See, Monki Doo. Intellectual Baby. Orlando Fl.
Doman, G. (1967). Teach Your Baby to Read. Philadelphia PA, Better Baby Institute.
Doman, G. D., Janet (2007). Teach Your Baby to Read. Philadelphia, Better Baby Institute.
Wolf, M. (2007). Proust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain. New York, Harper.
Submitted by Professor Elkind on Mon, 20/10/2008 - 11:06am.






















Comments
I like this approach
I have a friend who markets a phonics wizard learn-to-read program for kids of two on up and though my five-year-old loves reading with me and to her sister (in her own interpretive way) she hasn't shown much interest in real reading and I'm okay with that. My goal has been to instill a love of reading in her so that when she's ready she wants to learn. Thanks for confirming I'm on the right track!
reading with your child
Plus, I love reading with my baby and I will be really sad when she doesn't want me to read to her anymore but wants to do it all herself.
a smart kid
We usually go home so exhausted after working the whole afternoon, but we can do away with our tiredness upon a smart child.
These programs just make me angry!
Thank you for clarifying why interacting with your baby is the best way to foster development over sitting your baby in front of an expensive video which will teach her to read. These programs just make me angry---using brain research to sucker parents into buying their product that promises to make their child excel. How sad!
product of the doman philosophy
My parents were followers of Doman and still recite his statement that an infant so desires cognitive stimulation that he/she would rather learn greek than eat. Though it sounds extreme, they took this theory as fact and decided to send my brother and I to a french/american school in our area, which immerses kids in the french language from their first day there, and teaches them to read and write in french before they teach them to do so in English.
This blog states that there is no evidence to show that Doman's ideas about cognitive development in infants and toddlers have any truth to them. I personally believe that were it not for my early immersion in a second language, I would not have the educational aspirations that I have today. I first attended the Lycee when I was just 27 months old. I could read in both languages before the age of 4 and write in neat cursive shortly after.
To make a long story short, I still have a deep-rooted love of learning, and in fact found this website while doing research for my grad-school admissions essay. Of course, there are many other factors that I'm sure attributed to this, I wholeheartedly believe that the cognitive stimulation that I received from such an early age plays a huge part.
I have no real qualitative evidence to support my opinion, but it's still my opinion!!
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