Learn how to help your child read BIG words!

Published 2023-04-26
Reading BIG words gets so much easier when you know how to break them up and read one part at a time. Learn how to help your kids build their confidence when it comes to reading big words. Say goodbye to guessing, skipping, and/or mumbling through words.

If you need more help, go to www.KidsCanReadandWrite.com and/or www.KidsCanOnlineAcademy.com. To order our phonics review page, go to www.kidscanonlineacademy.com/offers/J8KgXBjL.

Our Black Belt Reading program walks you through the reading/writing process one “trick” at a time to help support you on your journey. Support packets come with each trick for both guided and independent practice. It is like having your very own reading teacher at your beck and call!

Let’s get your kids reading and writing!

#dyslexia #adhd #2e #add #autism #dyslexiasupport #learntoread #sld #readinghelp #katyhuller

All Comments (21)
  • @bhoi748
    confident is divided into syllables as con / fi / dent (Which also breaks the open syllable rule.)
  • @kinguchiha6212
    So my eight year old daughter shows me a book and asks me how to pronounce the authors name and it’s Chassahowitzka. I say ok what you wanna do is sound it out and break it down into little words. After a few mins of further explanation I say you know what let’s look up a YouTube video cuz I’m not teacher lol. Well this video was absolutely perfect, I’m not the best at explaining things, especially to my children so I love how there’s easy to understand videos like these on YouTube to assist me in teaching my babies.
  • @samokat3738
    Love the method of find the vowel and glue it to the next letter. Great and helpful.
  • I like your method about segmenting big words to make decoding easier!
  • @sharij915
    Thank you for sharing these techniques❤ My child teacher taught him to skip bigger words. I’m on a mission to teach him to be a confident reader.
  • @mwendabaisuya
    Thanks you very much for the ❤ I'm followed you in Zambia
  • @duckymr1
    I really enjoyed this video. Thanks for sharing. I'm looking for education about teaching adult ESL with low literacy skills. I need help so I'm looking for resources. Not finding anything for adults so I'm here looking for children. I am earning a BA in linguistics. 2 classes left! They unfortunately don't teach phonics in my program. But I did get other training, like phonetics and general linguistics. One thing I learned is that English is a language where we prefer to start syllables with the consonant. This is pretty important. It's specific to English. So I really liked this video, especially how you talk about connecting or gluing the vowel to the next letter, the tricks, and the way you segment with boxes and underline things with arrows. I like that you teach ER as a whole sound, thats awesome and I will take that with me. But I disagree with how you segmented every word here. Maybe that's a dialect difference, or maybe you are avoiding 4 letter chunks. I don't know. But what I do know is this: I say things differently than how you're teaching these words to be broken up. I say con fi dent. (Not con fid ent). I say per se vere. (Not per sev ere). And I say a ccom plish. (Not ac com plish). And I say the a in accomplish with a like "a cup of mustard", "the," or the "uh sound." (Its phonetic name is the schwa, [ə], not [æ]) Not a like "apple" or "black." Also I think people would be very supported if they learned 2 syllable words first before doing 3 syllables. If possible. Anyway thank you for your video and your hard work. ❤🎉
  • @IShowdig
    Thank you dear its really enjoyable to watch your videos, cuz u makes studying English is fun and easier, but i wish when ever u read a word u say what it means cuz im trying to also understand everything , anyways god bless you and thanks for your work ❤️
  • @lauranasca5327
    Do you have a video about how to read open syllables? I can't find one