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You are here: Home » Schoolwork » Help With Reading » What Happens Next?

What Happens Next?

Barbara J. Feldman · December 18, 2004 ·

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For children ages 2 to 6

Books with words or actions that appear over and over help your child to predict or tell what happens next. These are called “predictable” books. Your child will love to figure out the story in a predictable book!

What You Need

Predictable books with repeated words, phrases, questions, or rhymes (For suggested titles, see Resources for Children.)

What to Do

The first activities in the list below work well with younger children. As your child grows older, the later activities let him do more. But keep doing the first ones as long as he enjoys them.

  • Read predictable books to your child. Teach him to hear and say repeating words, such as names for colors, numbers, letters, and animals.

  • Pick a story that has repeated phrases, such as this example from The Three Little Pigs:

  • Wolf Voice: Little pig, little pig, let me come in.

    Little Pig: Not by the hair on my chinny-chin-chin!

    Wolf Voice: Then I’ll huff and I’ll puff and I’ll blow your house in!

    Your child will learn the repeated phrase and have fun joining in with you each time it shows up in the story. Pretty soon, he will join in before you tell him.

  • Read books that give hints about what might happen next. Such books have your child lifting flaps, looking through cut-out holes in the pages, “reading” small pictures that stand for words (called “rebuses”), and searching for many other clues. Get excited along with your child as he hurries to find out what happens next.

  • When reading predictable books, ask your child what he thinks will happen. See if he points out picture clues, if he mentions specific words or phrases, or if he connects the story to something that happens in real life. These are important skills for a beginning reader to learn.

  • Predictable books help children to understand how stories progress. A child easily learns familiar phrases and repeats them, pretending to read. Pretend reading gives a child a sense of power and the courage to keep trying.

    By Barbara J. Feldman

    Barbara J. Feldman is a syndicated columnist and the publisher of Surf Net Parents, Surfnetkids.com and 51+ other family-friendly sites. She has been creating websites since 1996, and loves teaching others how to solve WordPress problems.

    Filed Under: Help With Reading

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