Reading lessons should not begin until the child  knows his letters thoroughly and ideally until some beginning word  building work has been done:
Volume 1, p. 202
Word-making. The first exercises in the making of words will be  just as pleasant to the child. Exercises treated as a game, which yet  teach the powers of the letters, will be better to begin with than  actual sentences. Take up two of his letters and make the syllable ‘at’:  tell him it is the word we use when we say ‘at home,’ ‘at school.’ Then  put b to ‘at’– bat; c to ‘at’–cat; fat, hat, mat, sat, rat, and so on.  First, let the child say what the word becomes with each initial  consonant to ‘at,’ in order to make hat, pat, cat. Let the syllables all  be actual words which he knows. Set the words in a row, and let him  read them off. Do this with the short vowel sounds in combination with  each of the consonants, and the child will learn to read off dozens of  words of three letters, and will master the short-vowel sounds with  initial and final consonants without effort. Before long he will do the  lesson for himself. ‘How many words can you make with "en" and another  letter, with "od" and another letter?’ etc. Do not hurry him.
Word-making with Long Vowels, etc.–When  this sort of exercise becomes so easy that it is no longer interesting,  let the long sounds of the vowels be learnt in the same way: use the  same syllables as before with a final e; thus ‘at’ becomes  ‘ate,’ and we get late, pate, rate, etc. The  child may be told that a in ‘rate’ is long a; a in ‘rat’ is short a. He  will make the new sets of words with much facility, helped by the  experience he gained in the former lessons.
  
Then the same sort of thing with final  ‘ng’–’ing,’ ‘ang,’ ‘ong,’ ‘ung’; as in ring, fang, long, sung: initial  ‘th,’ as then, that: final ‘th,’ as with, pith, hath, lath, and so on,  through endless combinations which will suggest themselves. This is not  reading, but it preparing the ground for reading; words will be no  longer unfamiliar, perplexing objects, when the child meets with them in  a line of print. Require him to pronounce the words he makes with such  finish and distinctness that he can himself hear and count the sounds in  given way.
And then some spelling work:
Volume 1, p. 203
Early Spelling.–Accustom him from the first to shut his eyes  and spell the word he has made. This is important. Reading is not  spelling, nor is it necessary to spell in order to read well; but the  good speller is the child whose eye is quick enough to take in the  letters which compose it, in the act of reading off a word, and this is a  habit to be acquired from the first: accustom him to see the letters in  the word, and he will do without effort.
If words were always made on a given pattern  in English, if the same letter always represented the same sounds,  learning to read would be an easy matter; for the child would soon  acquire the few elements of which all words would, in that case, be  composed. But many of our English words are, each, a law unto itself:  there is nothing for it, but the child must learn to know them at sight; he must recognise ‘which,’ precisely as he recognises ‘B,’ because he has seen it before, been made to look at it  with interest, so that the pattern of the word is stamped upon his  retentive brain. This process should go on side by side with the  other–the learning of the powers of the letters; for the more variety  you can throw into his reading lessons, the more will the child enjoy  them. Lessons in word-making help him to take intelligent interest in  words; but his progress in the art of reading depends chiefly on the  ‘reading at sight’ lessons.
=====================================
Now we are ready to read.
1) Pick a text–something meaty but not too too  hard. Some of the classic children’s poetry works well for this,  especially shorter selections like Christina Rossetti or some Robert Louis Stephenson selections. The Treadwell readers or A Primary Reader by E. Louise Smythe may also work well for this.
2) Identify a handful of probably new words in the  text (or for the first lesson just take the first few words since  they’ll all be new).
3) Write one of the words on a board, then tell him what it is, and have him really look at it.
4) Erase the word, then put out a bunch of cards  with different words on them. Six of the cards should have that word on  them, and he needs to find them all.
5) Do the same thing with each of the other words.
6) Then have him spell the words using letter  tiles or magnet letters or something similar. Write the word (if he  can’t remember it), then have him study it, and then erase it. Then he  spells it with his letters.
7) Then take the words one at a time. Write the  word on the board. Then under it write, one at a time, other words that  have the same ending but a different beginning (like "cloud", "loud",  "proud", etc.). As you write each one, have him tell you the word.  (Use  a rhyming dictionary to help you make your list ahead of time–but only use words with the same spelling.)
8)  Write the words in a column on the board, in  any order.  Have him arrange the word cards in the same order, then have  him read them.
9)  Have him arrange the word cards in columns of  his own devising and have him read down the column, then rearrange and  do it again.
10)  Then you make sentences by dictating the  words to him and he looks for the cards and arranges them into  sentences. That gets easier as you learn more words, because you can use  any cards from previous lessons too. CM suggested leaving blanks when  you need a word that you don’t yet know, which helps to pique the  child’s interest in learning more words.
11)  Dictate the actual text from the reading and have him create it  with the word cards.  Have him read the text from the word cards.
12)  Have him read the text from the book.
Now, there’s more to it than that. You can get it  all (or most–you’ll get more if you comb through Parents Review  articles) if you go carefully through the Volume 1 sections on reading  and just jot down notes about what CM says to do.
Also, you don’t do all those steps in the same lesson. Keep it to 15 minutes at a time.
Notice how that simple process covers sight  reading (and paying attention to the actual word rather than guessing),  spelling, and phonics.
=====================================
Here’s the part about the Twinkle lesson:
Vol 1 p. 204
Read the passage for the child, very slowly, sweetly, with just  expression, so that it is pleasant to him to listen. Point to each word  as you read. Then point to ‘twinkle,’ ‘wonder,’ ‘star,’ ‘what,’–and  expect the child to pronounce each word in the verse taken  promiscuously; then, when he shows that he knows each word by itself,  and not before, let him read the two lines with clear enunciation and  expression: insist from the first on clear, beautiful reading, and do  not let the child fall into a dreary monotone, no more pleasant to  himself than to his listener. Of course, by this time he is able to say  the two lines; and let him say them clearly and beautifully. In his  after lesson he will learn the rest of the little poem.
=====================================
Then this:
Vol 1 pp. 205-6
But we have not yet finished the reading lesson on ‘Twinkle,  twinkle little star.’ The child should hunt through two or three pages  of good clear type for ‘little,’ star,’ you,’ are,’ each of the words he  has learned, until the word he knows looks out upon him like the face  of a friend in a crowd of strangers, and he is able to pounce upon it  anywhere. Lest he grow weary of the search, the teacher should guide  him, unawares, to the line or paragraph where the word he wants occurs.  Already the child has accumulated a little capital; he knows eight or  ten words so well that he will recognise them anywhere, and the lesson  has occupied probably ten minutes. The next ‘reading at sight’ lesson  will begin with a hunt for the familiar words, and then– 
"Up above the world so high,
Like a diamond in the sky,"
should be gone through in the same way. As  spelling is simply the art of seeing, seeing the letters in a word as we  see the features of a face–say to the child, ‘Can you spell sky?’–or  any of the shorter words. He is put on his mettle, and if he fails this  time, be sure he will be able to spell the word when you ask him next; but do not let him learn to spell or even say the letters aloud with the word before him.
=====================================
What I described above is more like the Cock Robin lesson, starting on p. 212:
Now for the lesson. Bobbie and I are shut  in by ourselves in the morning room. I always use a black-board in  teaching the children. I write up, in good clear ‘print’ hand,
Cock Robin
Bobbie watches with more interest because he knows his letters. I say, pointing to the word, ‘cock robin,’ which he repeats.
  
"Then the words in the box are scattered on the table, and he finds half a dozen ‘cock robins’ with great ease.
We do the same thing with ‘sparrow,’ ‘arrow,’  ‘said,’ ‘killed,’ ‘who,’ and so on, till all the words in the verse have  been learned. The words on the black-board grow into a column, which  Bob reads backwards and forwards, and every way, except as the words run  in the verse.
Then Bobbie arranges the loose words into columns like that on the board.
Then into columns of his own devising, which he reads off.
Lastly, culminating joy (the whole lesson has been a delight!), he finds among the loose words, at my dictation,
‘Who killed Cock Robin
I said the sparrow
With my bow and arrow
I killed Cock Robin,’
Arranging the words in verse form.
Then I had still one unmutilated copy,  out of which Bob had the pleasure of reading the verse, and he read it  forwards and backwards. So long as he lives he will know those twelve  words."
When we have mastered the words of the  second verse, Bob runs through the first in the book, naming words here  and there as I point to them. It takes less than a minute, and the  ground is secured."
=====================================
Then in the Little Pussy lesson we see a more complete picture, from p.218:
Steps.–And now, we begin. Material:  Tommy’s box of loose letters, the new ‘Little Pussy’ box, pencil and  paper, or much better, blackboard and chalk. We write up in good big  print hand ‘Pussy.’ Tommy watches with interest: he knows the letters,  and probably says them as we write. Besides, he is prepared for the  great event of his life; he knows he is going to begin to learn to read  to-day. But we do not ask anything yet of his previous knowledge. We  simply tell him that the word is ‘Pussy.’ Interest at once; he knows the  thing, Pussy, and the written symbol is pleasant in his eyes because it  is associated with an existing idea in his mind. He is told to look at  the word ‘Pussy’ until he is sure he would know it again. Then he makes  ‘Pussy’ from memory with his own loose letters. Then the little bag  containing our two lines in loose words is turned out, and he finds the  word ‘Pussy’; and, lastly, the little sheet with the poem printed on it  is shown to him, and he finds ‘Pussy,’ but is not allowed yet to find  out the run of the rhyme. ‘Coat, little, like, is, her, warm, I, so,’  are taught in the same way, in less time than it takes to describe the  lesson. When each new word is learned, Tommy makes a column of the old  ones, and reads up and down and cris-cras, the column on the  blackboard.
Reading Sentences–He knows words now, but he  cannot yet read sentences. Now for the delight of reading. He finds at  our dictation, amongst his loose words, ‘Pussy––is–warm,’ places them in ‘reading’ order, one after the other, and then reads off the sentence. Joy, as of one who has found a  new planet! And Tommy has indeed found a new poet. Then,  ‘her-little-coat-is-warm,’ ‘Pussy-is-so-little,’ ‘I-like-Pussy,’  ‘Pussy-is-little-like-her-coat,’ and so on through a dozen more little  arrangements. If the rhyme can be kept a secret till the whole is worked  out, so much the better. To make the verses up with his own loose words  will give Tommy such a delicious sense that knowledge is power, as few  occasions in after life will afford. Anyway, reading is to him a delight  henceforth, and it will require very bad management indeed to make him  hate it.
Tommy’s Second Lesson.–Tommy promises himself  another reading lesson next day, but he has instead a spelling lesson,  conducted somewhat in this way:
He makes the word ‘coat’ with his letters,  from memory if he can; if not, with the pattern word. Say ‘coat’ slowly;  give the sound of the c. ‘Take away c, and what have we left?’ A little  help will get ‘oat’ from him. How would you make ‘boat’ (say the word  very slowly, bringing out the sound of b). He knows the sounds of the  letters, and says b-oat readily; fl-oat, two added sounds, which you  lead him to find out; g-oat, he will give you the g, and find goat a  charming new word to know; m-oat, he easily decides on the sound of m; a  little talk about moat; the other words are too familiar to need  explanation. Tommy will, no doubt, offer ‘note’ and we must make a clean  breast of it and say, ‘No, note is spelt with other letters’; but what  other letters we do not tell him now. Thus he comes to learn  incidentally and very gradually that different groups of letters may  stand for the same sounds. But we do not ask him to generalise; we only let him have the fact that  n-oat does not spell the symbol we express by ‘note.’ ‘Stoat’–he will  be able to give the sounds of the initial letters, and stoat again calls  for a little talk–another interesting word. He has made a group of  words with his letters, and there they are on the black-board in a  column, thus
c-oat
m-oat
g-oat
fl-oat
st-oat
b-oat
He reads the column up and down and cris-cras;  every word has a meaning and carries an idea. Then the loose words he  knows are turned out, and we dictate new sentences, which he arranges:  ‘I-like-her-goat’; ‘her-little-stoat-is-warm,’ and so on, making the new  words with loose letters.
Unknown Words–Now for a new experience. We  dictate ‘Pussy in the boat.’ Consternation! Tommy does not know ‘in’ nor  ‘the.’ ‘Put counters for the words you don’t know; they may soon come  in our lessons,’ and Tommy has a desire and a need–that is, an appetite  for learning.
Like Combinations have Different Sounds.–We  deal with the remaining words in the same way–’little’ gives brittle,  tittle, skittle: Pussy, is, I, and her, give no new words. ‘Like’ gives  mike and pike. ‘so’ gives no, do (the musical ‘do’), and lo! From ‘warm’  we get arm, harm, charm, barm, alarm; we pronounced warm as arm. Tommy  perceives that such a pronunciation is wrong and vulgar, and sees that all these words are sounded like ‘arm,’  but not one of them like ‘warm’–that is, he sees that the same group of  letters need not always have the same sound. But we do not ask him to  make a note of this new piece of knowledge; we let it grow into him  gradually, after many experiences.
By this time he has eighteen new words on the  blackboard of which to make sentences with the nine loose words of  ‘Pussy.’ Her skittle is little, her charm is brittle, her arm is warm,  and so on. But we take care that the sentences make sense. Her goat is  brittle, is ‘silly,’ and not to be thought of at all. Tommy’s new words  are written in his ‘note-book’ in print hand, so that he can take stock  of his possessions in the way of words.
Moral Training in Reading Lessons–The next day  we do the last two lines of the stanza, as at first. These lines afford  hardly any material for a spelling lesson, so in our next lesson we go  on with the second verse. But our stock of words is growing; we are  able, as we go on, to make an almost unlimited number of little  sentences. If we have to use counters now and then, why, that only whets  our appetite for knowledge. By the time Tommy has worked ‘Little Pussy’  through he has quite a large stock of words; has considerable power to  attack new words with familiar combinations; what is more, he has  achieved; he has courage to attack all ‘learning,’ and has a sense that  delightful results are quite within reach. Moreover, he learns to read  in a way that affords him some moral training. There is no stumbling, no  hesitation from the first, but bright attention and perfect  achievement. His reading lesson is a delight, of which he is deprived  when he comes to his lesson in a lazy, drawling mood. Perfect  enunciation and precision are insisted on, and when he comes to arrange  the whole of the little rhyme in his loose words and read it off (most  delightful of all the lessons) his reading must be a perfect and  finished recitation. [Spirited nursery rhymes form the best material for  such reading lessons. A 'Delightful Reading Box' has been issued on  similar plan to the 'Pussy' Box, whose one fault is that the verses are a  little dull. But this 'Box' should be of great use]. I believe that  this is a practical common-sense way to teach reading in English. It may  be profitable for the little German child to work through all possibly  dreary combinations of letters before he is permitted to have any joy in  ‘reading,’ because wherever these combinations occur they will have the  sounds the child has learned laboriously. The fact that English is  anomalous as regards the connection between sign and sound, happily  exonerates us from enforcing this dreary grind. [It is desirable that  'Tommy' should not begin to 'read' until his intelligence is equal to  the effort required by these lessons. Even then, it may be well to break  up one into two, or half a dozen, as he is able to take it].

Hi Kathy!
ReplyDeleteWhat a helpful post on the reading process! I can't believe no one else commented on it yet. (In 4 years!) Thanks for spelling it out.
:) Jen
In their defense, I should point out that I moved these posts from the previous blog platform I was using, so the comments (if any) didn't move with them. And I'm not sure how many people even read the posts over there! lol Not that I'm sure many read them now either. . . :-)
ReplyDeleteBookmarking this post... in fact, I think I'll print portions of it out if you don't mind? Very helpful, thank you so much....
ReplyDeleteJenn
I am so glad you posted this link in ao forum year 0 thread. I was just reading through some of the parents' review articles about beginning to read and saw that you had added this link. I am very glad to have your discussion of it here. Thanks!
ReplyDelete