Tutoring Your Teen

If you have a struggling teen reader at home there's good news. According to the May 2008 edition of the Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy one-on-one tutoring can help. One great way to help your struggling teen is through building his/her vocabulary skills. This can be done at home by teaching some simple root words, prefixes and suffixes. I found the following link that will lead you to a user friendly list: http://www.betterendings.org/homeschool/Words/Root%20Words.htm. Don't overwhelm your child by teaching too many at one time.

HalWLanse's picture

Tutoring Your Teen--Part II

In order for any teen to build his or her reading skills they must read, experts say, at least two hours per day. Schools should be part of this process but most often they aren't. Under these circumstances, taking up the slack at home becomes very important. You cannot force adolescents to read, you can only entice them. This means you must provide them with books they find interesting. Reading is like meditating: it works if one builds concentration slowly over time and if it's pleasurable. Here are some links to websites where you can find a range of interesting young adult (YA) fiction. If you and your teen find interesting books on any of these sites--or elsewhere--it would be great if both of you could read them and discuss what you like about the books. A great way to tutor your teen and make it fun is to disucss the problems the main characters have and how they deal with these problems. Ask yur teen if he/she would have handled the problem differently. This is a comprehension-building technique. It's also a great way of spending quality time together.

Teen books with an edge: http://www.thisispush.com

Highly recommended YA literature from the American Library Association: http://www.ala.org/ala/yalsa/booklistsawards/bestbooksya/bestbooksyoung....

Gay themed YA fiction from the author of the Rainbow Boys series. (Do buy his books; they’re wonderful.): http://www.alexsanchez.com/gay_teen_books.htm

Books with African American themes for children of all ages: http://www.blackbooksdirect.com/children.html

Multicultural literature recommended on the Alan Review (with suggested age ranges and a key to determine each book’s degree of difficuly): http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/ejournals/ALAN/fall95/Ericson.html

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