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How to Make Books for Home Schooling

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Summary: Save money by learning how to make your own books for your home schooled kids and have them learn to how to care for books; get more tips in this free education video.

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By Matt Moskal
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Matt Moskal is a free-lance artist with a BA in Elementary / Special Education. He has taught Kindergarten through 6th grade in the Philadelphia School District since 2003, using his...read more

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"I try to stay away from using real books in the beginning when I'm teaching a child to read because they will have a lot of words that they haven't learned the rules for yet and that can become confusing. We want to go slowly and step by step so therefore it becomes necessary at some point to generate your own hand made books. Now if you don't want to go through all this trouble, you can do this in your workbook like everything else in your notebook and you can just do it step by step but I find it's neat to make these little things. You can make them very quickly and you can slowly develop a library of them and keep them on a shelf and it also teaches a child the proper way to take care of a book, if they mess it up it's not like they're ruining a book you paid for. And the way we do this is very simple, take eight and a half by eleven, basic copy sheet like this, fold it in half, staple it, boom, boom, boom. If you get a long armed stapler you can make it look professional and staple it right along the seam but you don't have to and simple, title it, give it a simple picture, use your creativity but most importantly, use only the words the child has learned up until this point. That will limit you and the story won't be Shakespeare and it won't be John Grisham but it will be a great story for that child learning to read. Start very simple, a cat sat. There's your picture. Just throw in a little picture so they get some kind of sense that yes, I read it right, look at that. Now mix it up. A dog ran. Notice I didn't say a dog sat. We want to mix it up a little bit. If you use the same words on every page or even the same types of words then they start to try to guess and they're not really trying to sound out. And then we can move, you can get a little more complicated. I usually won't do two lines until a little while later but you can say a big rat was on the dog. Silly picture. Notice every word here is a word you can sound out except for was and the which are non-phonetic words that we also learned through our flash cards. And there, and you can go on until the end and just create your own, make it as fun as you like. I usually take about three sheets, it makes about twelve pages all together or you can do four sheets and have sixteen pages."

eHow Article: How to Make Books for Home Schooling

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