Read everything, even if you don’t understand it. Read the words and symbols until that item is boring, them read another. At this stage, it barely even matters what you are reading. There is no teacher that can show you everything that there is to know, but strong reading skills will help you discover anything.
It’s pointless to rush it. He will get interested in reading when he is ready. Remember that most people are nothing like Bean or HJPEV.
At this point you are way out of his zone of proximal development. Pointing out words to him is as useful as showing him the equations of particle physics or a score of the Magic Flute: it’s way beyond his comprehension.
Imagine instead blocks with letters he can play with, which make sounds when he touches them. This is much closer to what he can comprehend. Imagine further that these blocks can be stuck together and that touching these block trains results in the syllables they make being vocalized. An so on, until words and sentences can be constructed. I suspect that toys like that already exist out there. Unfortunately, written English is extremely anti-phonetic, so the reading barrier might be lower if your native tongue is Spanish or something.
Read.
Read everything, even if you don’t understand it. Read the words and symbols until that item is boring, them read another. At this stage, it barely even matters what you are reading. There is no teacher that can show you everything that there is to know, but strong reading skills will help you discover anything.
He reads a lot. He literally started at age 1.
My son is 8 months old. I point to each word as I read them to him, but that’s about it. Is there anything else I should be doing?
It’s pointless to rush it. He will get interested in reading when he is ready. Remember that most people are nothing like Bean or HJPEV.
At this point you are way out of his zone of proximal development. Pointing out words to him is as useful as showing him the equations of particle physics or a score of the Magic Flute: it’s way beyond his comprehension.
Imagine instead blocks with letters he can play with, which make sounds when he touches them. This is much closer to what he can comprehend. Imagine further that these blocks can be stuck together and that touching these block trains results in the syllables they make being vocalized. An so on, until words and sentences can be constructed. I suspect that toys like that already exist out there. Unfortunately, written English is extremely anti-phonetic, so the reading barrier might be lower if your native tongue is Spanish or something.
No, genetics almost certainly played a huge role in his reading this early. We didn’t intend for him to start reading at 1.