I am watching The Doctors on tv right now and they were just talking about this program parents can do at home with their LO that teaches kids to start reading early. the "author" of the program says that he started teaching his 3 month old to read and by 11 months could read almost anything. They even showed clips to prove that these kids can actually read. (I was blown away.)
What do you think about this? Would you ever consider trying this?
Re: will your baby read by 11 months?
Ze Blog | Tweet Tweet | Link to "retired" EP Badges
I agree.
This is JMHO - but no I wouldn't do this. Why on earth would an 11 month old need to read? Seems more like something parents can brag about to me... I just feel like there are many more productive things I can do with my baby (play! read TO them! talk to them!) that encourages learning in a natural way. I don't think spending hours a day with flashcards and videos is all that great of an idea. Let's let babies just be babies, and worry about reading when they get to an appropriate age.
This. And it is all just memorization anyway. Plus, my daughter won't even sit still long enough for me to read her a story (unless it is right before bed)...she certainly isn't going to sit there and memorize flashcards.
Exactly! What is the benefit to push your baby? I can wait a couple of years (And I love reading!)
Reading at 11 months? I know kids who barely talk, going on two years old.
Do I want my kid to read early? Yes. I could, and I truly believe the early start benefitted me in a number of ways. But I'm with the PP who says let's focus on other developmental opportunities at that age.
Absolutely! I think parents try to rush their kids to learn things before it is important and likely they will miss out on learning other things that they do need to be learning at that age.
I know someone who has used the Your Baby Can Read very successfully with 2 children and we do intend to use it on this baby as well. It isn't all memorization. You can clearly see two year old children reading full text books after using the program.
I don't consider it pushing however. I could sit down and teach my child how to play candy land or I can teach them how to read and kick start an interest in books and language which will be a valuable tool all of their lives. Plus having your child be able to communicate their needs early on seems like a womderful thing to me.
Absolutely not. I was a literacy tutor for 3rd graders with Americorps in Chicago and saw so many kids who were "taught to read" with memorization that ended up being so far behind everyone else in their class because the comprehension and phonetics just weren't there. They'd go into school having been talked up like they were so good at reading only to end up failing the subject and having horrible self esteem in that area. They were the hardest kids to get to come around. I'd much rather my children have the solid foundation they gain from understanding letters, phonics and grammar.
Man, I read "Baby, Inc." and remember that the author took this apart (by showing research) but I don't remember what she said about it.
But I wouldn't do it anyways- don't see a point, and do see a rip-off.
I work in a Developmental Disabilities Agency as a Developmental Therapist. I am ALL for this. 11 months, might be a little quick, but I am definitely for starting around 1 to 1 1/2. The most important thing I think ALL parents need to know is this:
The most information a person will ever learn AND retain in their entire life is from birth to age 7. This applies to education, reading, language (and learning different languages), relationship skills and interaction, etc.
I see ZERO issues with starting reading and other educational things young. You can still have lots of FUN and teach them things and how to read. I think parents should more fully take advantage of the time they have available to them to teach their young children and help them learn about the world that surrounds them.
With all the children and adults I work with that have disabilities, we can teach the most in the least amount of time to the kids who fall in the age 3-7 category (we don't work in the infant/toddler program). Time and time again I catch myself wishing we had started with some of our clients at much younger ages because it becomes much harder after that birth- age 7 window is gone to teach them and have them retain what we teach.
Just so you know, this thread really isn't about when you'll start teaching your kid to read. It's about using a particular, expensive, program to have your kid reading by 11 months old.
I agree to early teaching, but think that it should be a part of everyday life, not a program, and I think that this allows you to keep tabs on how your child is progressing and watch them for difficulties of warning signs at the same time.
I agree with this. There is no way an 11 month old can read.
I'm not sure if it's this particular product your talking about but a family member had her daughter reading before she was a year old and it definitely wasn't memorization b/c she was reading full out books for kids in second grade outloud from cover to cover. There is no way she could have memorized it all.
This does not mean that I agree with the program, but I know that kids that young can learn to read etc. by seeing it myself.