Confessions of a Bad Kindergarten Mom (and Bob Books)
This post may contain affiliate links.
As you know, JJ is in kindergarten and I’ve been frustrated with her school’s lack of differentiation and reliance upon worksheets during reading time. I couldn’t believe how little JJ could read. We needed reading help. Luckily, Bob Books saved me.
When I asked a trusted reading expert to assess JJ in reading and the results shocked me — JJ was at a preschool reading level and didn’t know half the kindergarten sight words. The expert game me a sight word list, and a book and encouraged me to practice with JJ at home.
Now you’re wondering why I didn’t know this – either about her level or the sight words. I should have been keeping up, you’re right. We had done our sight word wall for a few months, I thought she knew them. But, not so much. Not when it’s not practiced or reinforced – by me or the school.(Duh, right?) I knew better.
However, in my defense, one of the reasons, besides just sucking as a mom, was my worry about pushing her too fast, too soon. Having read enough research on learning disabilities caused by pushing academics at early ages, I didn’t want to push her until she was out of the worksheet environment and showed an interest in reading. But, I really should have been doing something at home besides just reading aloud to her.
So, when Bob Books asked if I wanted to try their early reading sets, I gladly agreed, hoping their books would give me a place to start with JJ for our reading time at home.
We started with Bob Books Set 3, Word Families.
Every day she read two Bob Books books to me. We worked on using her finger to track – she hated that – and decoding.
* Also, I made her a set of sight-word flashcards that she didn’t know on key rings and we reviewed all the others she had learned and added a new one each day.
I really liked the Bob Books and how it made reading accessible for JJ and me. Plus, the books are short and sweet. I liked that the last pages of each book tell you what the book introduced, for example in Cat and Mouse from Set 4, some of the new concepts listed are: “blends: sn – snap, th – that, st – stop, lp – help, ck – back.”
Have you seen Bob Books? Physically, they’re small. The illustrations are line drawings with only a few splashes of one color per picture. I wondered if the illustrations would be a turn-off for JJ but she liked them — and LOVED them on the iPad because reading the word correctly meant the pictures got colored in.
Bob Books Sets 1 – 5
Set 1 – Beginning Readers (12 books)
Set 2 – Advancing Beginners (12 books)
Set 3 – Word Families (10 books)
Set 4 – Complex Words (8 books)
Set 5 – Long Vowels (8 books)
Each set of books includes hints for teaching your child to read and ideas for the specific set.
Bob Books Sight Words
These books use the common sight words, three new sight words are introduced in each book. Plus they come with two-sided, sight word flash cards. (The sight words are an example of something a child must memorize since they often aren’t decodable and therefore a time when I do endorse flash cards.)








Regarding your daughter, it may be possible that she has a vision problem. One of my coworkers’ daughters was doing terribly in first grade reading (and in kindergarten she had been doing fine), the family was shocked and the teacher was disappointed. Turned out she needed glasses. If you go in for an exam, you may want to go to an opthamologist instead of an optician. I’m not sure. Anyway, that’s why they screen kids yearly at school! You just never know.
that’s such a good point – I will get her eyes checked. (I’m legally blind so she doesn’t have much of a chance for good eye sight.) Thank you. 🙂
As has Bob Books.
And now you’ve been liked on Facebook! 🙂
Oooh, now there’s a give-away that I’d love to have. We start kindergarten in the fall, and I’ve been trying to gear myself up for sight words.
Would love to win for my 4 year old son.