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  2. Talk, Read and Sing Together Every Day! - U.S. Department of ...

    www2.ed.gov/documents/early-learning/talk-read...

    2. Point out key words or ideas to help get the children ready for the story. 3. Read the book from beginning to end and use as much expression and gesture as you can. 4. Ask children to play an active part by making predictions along the way, answering questions, and pointing to or making comments about pictures, letters, and words. 5.

  3. Planning for an Interactive Readaloud with Children in Pre-K ...

    ies.ed.gov/ncee/edlabs/regions/west/relwestFiles/...

    1. Read: Read the selected parts of the book aloud, pausing to ask 1–2 deeper-dive questions that target understanding the theme (moral or message) of the story. 2. Talk: Pause during reading to ask deeper-dive questions. Encourage the child to respond in complete sentences. 3.

  4. Resources for Parents and Families - Home - Office of ...

    oese.ed.gov/resources/learning-at-home/resources...

    This web-based resource from REL Central, REL Appalachia, and REL Northwest provides quick tips, evidence-based activities and games, and videos that families and caregivers can use at home to support math learning for children ages 2-8. The new resource complements and extends the What Works Clearinghouse practice guide Teaching Math to Young ...

  5. Literacy Begins At Home: Teach Them to Read - ed

    lincs.ed.gov/publications/pdf/Literacy_Home.pdf

    Here are some ways you can help your child “get ready to read” during the ages of 4 and 5. I help my child hear and say the first sound in words (like “b” in boat), and notice when different words start with the same sound (like “boat” and “book”). I help my child hear words that rhyme (like moose, goose, and caboose).

  6. Preschool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preschool

    Children who attend Preschool learn how the world around them works through play and communication. Pre-K (or Pre-Kindergarten) from 4 to 5 years old – held in Nursery School and is an initiative to improve access to pre-primary schools for children in the USA. There is much more than teaching a child colors, numbers, shapes and so on.

  7. our lives leaving us in one way or another. Teachers can never be completely sure where the conversation about books leads us; it depends on the students, their experiences, and wonderings. Susan recalls both teacher-generated and student-generated topics and the use of children’s literature, especially during her last years as a primary teacher.

  8. Preschool Grants for Children with Disabilities

    www2.ed.gov/programs/oseppsg/index.html

    Program Description. The Preschool Grants program provides formula grants to states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico to make available special education and related services for children with disabilities aged 3 through 5. In order to be eligible for these grants, states must serve all eligible children with disabilities aged 3 ...

  9. Best Practices Clearinghouse - PreK-12 - ed

    bestpracticesclearinghouse.ed.gov/pre-k-12.html

    Submit Your Lessons Learned and Best Practices. Have a lessons learned or best practice for helping PreK-12 schools and school districts continue to recover from the pandemic? Visit the Best Practices Submission page to view details on submission requirements, and then e-mail Bestpracticesclearinghouse@ed.gov to share your lessons learned or ...