Category Archives: Quiz

Six questions to test your beginning reader knowledge

What is the best method for learning to read, based on research?

  • primarily using phonics
  • figuring out words from their context or from pictures
  • memorizing words (sight words, whole language)

Two fists with thumbs up and knuckles touching make letter "b" and "d" with a BeD visualized between the two thumbs.What two printed letters are the hardest for children to distinguish?

  • p and q
  • q and g
  • b and d
  • m and n

Which two short vowel sounds are hardest for children to distinguish?

  • a and e
  • e and i
  • o and u
  • a and o

In order to learn to read, do children need to recite and/or recognize the ABC’s in alphabetical order?

  • yes
  • no

Which comes first?

  • recognizing a letter
  • recognizing a sound?

How many letter sounds does a child need to hear and speak in order to speak standard American English?

  • 26
  • 23
  • 42

Answers

Three children with signs around their necks that read: Meniruze words, Phonics, Whole LanguagePrimarily using phonics is the best method for learning to read. The US government did a comprehensive study of hundreds of research studies on how children learn to read and discovered that using a phonics-based approach produces the best results.

Lower case “b” and “d” are the hardest letter shapes for children to distinguish. Most children are confused at first.  Sometimes this confusion lasts into third grade, but with time, all children figure it out.

Short “e” and “i” are the hardest letter sounds to distinguish. Most reading series start by teaching short “a” followed by short “o” because these two sounds are the easiest to distinguish.  Expect lots of errors when “e” and “i” words are learned, and expect learning them will take more time.  Short “u” is harder than “a” and “o,” but since there are far fewer such words, learning “u” is not so hard as learning “e” and “i.

Beginning readers do not need to know their ABC’s in order. Alphabetic order is a second or third grade skill, so it doesn’t need to be learned immediately.

Recognizing a sound is more important than recognizing a letter at first. Beginning readers need to be able to hear sounds and to pronounce them aloud.  They do not need an alphabet in front of them to do that.  Toddlers can learn to recognize sounds long before they are ready to read letters.

Child looking at flash cards of two and three letter words.

.

American standard English has 42 sounds. Some of the 26 letters duplicate sounds such as “c” and “k,” “c” and “s,” “s” and “z,” and “qu” and “kw.”  Many vowel sounds can be written multiple ways (ugly, Hannah, other).  Some sounds take two letters to make (th, ch, sh).  Regional dialects can add or subtract a sound or two, but in general there are 42 separate sounds in American English.

Take a quiz on information from our past blogs and test your understanding of teaching reading to little kids.

Click on photos to enlarge them
Answers are at the bottom of the blog

Three children with signs around their necks that read: Meniruze words, Phonics, Whole Language1. Research shows that the best way to teach preschoolers to read is with:
a.
systematic phonics   b. whole language  c. sight words

Child seeing letter on dog's collar2. What are the easiest letter sounds to teach a beginning reader?
a.
short vowels  b. long vowels
c. particular consonants

young girl with pencil in mouth3. Does it matter how a child holds a pencil?
a.
No, as long as the printing is legible.  b. Yes, the tripod method is best (thumb, index finger, middle finger).  c. No, unless the grip produces cramping, fatigue or pain.

Lower case b and d are large eyes , seeing each other "eye to eye."4. Is there an easy way to teach a child to distinguish “b” from “d”?
a.
Yes, by forming a “bed” with both fists.  b. No, but eventually everyone figures it out.  c. No, but only kids with dyslexia have trouble after first grade.

Chart of 4 reading components

5. Is English a harder language to read than other Western languages?
a.
No, it just seems that way because English has so many words.  b. Yes, the multi-letter structure of syllables makes English more difficult.  c. Yes, the multiple ways of spelling the same sound make English more difficult.

Boy telling mother information from a book about turtles

6. Do preschool boys prefer different reading material from preschool girls?
a.
No, at that age their preferences are pretty similar.  b. Yes, preschool boys prefer more nonfiction and adventure stories.

Simon Says touch your tummy7. What games are especially good for getting preschoolers ready to read?
a.
Ball games of all kinds  b. “Mother, May I” and “Simon Says”  c. Running

Plow horse crisscrossing a field, left and then right and then left again.

8. Why do we read from left to right in English?
a. The Greeks did it, and then the Romans did it, and so now we do it.  b. Right-handed scribes didn’t smudge going from left to right.  c. Right-handed people could see what they just wrote by going from left to right.

child retelling story of Goldilocks

9. What do schools expect kindergarteners to know about reading?
a.
Rhyming words are the same at the end, not the beginning.
b. There are two kinds of vowel sounds:  long and short.  c. How to identify 26 upper and lower case letters

Dyslexia Warning Signs by Age10. Are there more dyslexic readers in English than in other languages?
a.
Yes.  English is harder than most languages to decode.  b. No, but in the U.S. children are tested more for disabilities.  c. Yes, dyslexia is somewhat culturally induced.

Answers to Quiz on knowledge of reading and preschoolers.

1. Research shows that the best way to teach preschoolers to read is with systematic phonics.  The US government ended the debate with a large study about ten years ago.  See blog.

2. What are the easiest letter sounds to teach a beginning reader?  Particular consonants which almost always sound the same are the easiest way to start.  See blog.

3. Does it matter how a child holds a pencil?  Experts say the tripod method leads to less cramping, fatigue and pain.  See blog.

4. Is there an easy way to teach a child to distinguish “b” from “d”?  Forming a “bed” with both fists works once a child knows how to spell bed.  See blog.

5. Is English a harder language to read than other Western languages?  Yes, the multi-letter structure of syllables and the multiple ways of spelling the same sound make English more difficult.  See blog.

6. Do preschool boys prefer different reading material from preschool girls?  Yes, preschool boys prefer more nonfiction and adventure stories compared to girls.  See blog.

7. What games are especially good for getting preschoolers ready to read?  “Mother, May I,” “Simon Says” and games requiring listening and following directions are good.  See blog.

8Why do we read from left to right in English?  No one knows, but there are lots of theories.  See blog.

9. What do schools expect kindergarteners to know about reading?  Rhyming words, short and long vowels, and all the letters and their sounds are on the short list.  See blog.

10. Are there more dyslexic readers in English than in other languages?  Yes, English is harder than most languages to decode, in part because English spelling has not kept up with English pronunciation and because of the multiple ways of pronouncing almost all letters.  See blog.