Thursday, September 9, 2010

Bob Books - Tools for Learning to Read


I first learned about Bob Books when I worked for one of the largest book retailers. Parents would come in looking for them frantically. So of course when Ricky was 4, I bought them and tried to introduce them to him.

He hated them almost immediately and one time had a fit so big that I never brought them out for months. Earlier this summer, Mark introduced Halo - an inappropriate (age 17) video game on the xbox to Ricky. I decided to grasp the opportunity and bribe my son to learn to read and his reward would be time on Halo. It totally worked.

Ricky has now mastered 16 Bob Books so far and knows many sight words. He enjoys reading these books to his grandmothers, his aunts, uncles, and anyone who will listen. Learning them has boosted his confidence at school and about himself in general and it's really great to see. It's cool to be able to read a book by yourself!

For those of you who may not know what Bob Books are, they are little books - about 8 pages each, that build on reading. They have to be read in order - as each book builds on the previous one in terms of sight words, and the sounds. The box set Ricky has almost finished is the short vowels. He has 2 more books to go to finish the 18 book box set. The second box set has the long vowels. I bought these larger box sets from Costco earlier this year.

I totally recommend these books for parents to do with their kids to supplement what they are learning in school.

Photo borrowed from http://www.bobbooks.com/img/mfbb-1.jpg