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While teaching reading to children of all ages and cognitive abilities, The Phonics Game was the most valuable tool I utilized in 24 years. Carefully follow the instructions and your child/children will learn all the sounds, blends, rules, etc. necessary in becoming a competent reader. Not only will they learn how to sound out multi-syllable words, they will have fun while using their newly acquired phonemic-awareness skills.All children have the right to become proud and successful readers so my sincere thanks to the people who developed this program. Have fun while playing and learning with your child/children. Yes, adults can also learn rules they were unaware exisited.
Best Deals for The Phonics Game -- 18 Hours of Fun For Better Reading (3 VHS
I used this game for five years as a teacher with a variety of struggling readers from 1997-2002. Every child I used this game with dramatically improved his or her reading skills as measured by norm-referenced assessments. This included elementary students with generic learning disabilities, dyslexia, autism, behavioral challenges, Downs Syndrome and students who were generally struggling with learning to read. With two exceptions, every child also enjoyed the games and asked to play as often as I would "let" them. :)This fall I found an old copy of the game at Goodwill and grabbed it thinking my children might enjoy it someday. I got it home and, on a whim, tried it with my typically-developing kindergartener. She loved it and improved her cvc (e.g. led, nip) accuracy in text from 82% to 100% after just one session. (Yes, I am a data geek. It is hard to stop taking running records after all these years!) The response from my just-turned-four-year-old was even more dramatic. She saw her sister playing and wanted in on the action midway through the game. She took over for me and started sounding out and blending words just by observation. (In the interest of full disclosure, she has been participating along with her sister in "stretch and shrink" phonemic awareness activities, which are precursors to using the sound-symbol relationship to sound out and blend words.) She did, however, need some help with systematically looking for the cards she could take.
As a researcher whose dissertation was on advanced reading decoding strategies, as a teacher of struggling readers, and as a mother of typically-developing children, I highly recommend The Phonics Game.
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