Helping Children With Learning Porblem

Written by Anil Vij


Continued from page 1

There is a law--the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)--that may allow you to get certain services for your child from your school district. Your child might qualify to receive help from a speech and language therapist or other specialist, or she might qualify to receive materials designed to match her needs.

You can learn about your special education rights and responsibilities by requesting thatrepparttar school give you-- in your first language--a summary of legal rights. To find out about programs for children with disabilities that are available in your state, contactrepparttar 110217 National Information Center for Children and Youth with Disabilities.

The good news is that no matter how long it takes, most children can learn to read. Parents, teachers, and other professionals can work together to determine if a child has a learning disability or other problem, and then providerepparttar 110218 right help as soon as possible. When a child gets such help, chances are very good that she will developrepparttar 110219 skills she needs to succeed in school and in life. Nothing is more important than your support for your child as she goes through school. Make sure she gets any extra help she needs as soon as possible, and always encourage her and praise her efforts.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Anil Vij is the creator of the ultimate parenting toolbox,which has helped parents all over the world raise smarter,healthier and happier children ==> http://www.expertsonparenting.com Sign up for Anil's Experts On Parenting Newsletter - just send a blank email ===> mailto: parentingnews@aweber.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Read Together With Your Baby

Written by Anil Vij


Continued from page 1

Most of all, make sure that reading stays fun for both of you!

Reading books with their children is one ofrepparttar most important things that parents can do to help their children become readers.

What Does It Mean?

Fromrepparttar 110216 earliest days, talk with your child about what you are reading. You might point to pictures and name what is in them. When he is ready, have him dorepparttar 110217 same. Ask him, for example, if he can findrepparttar 110218 little mouse inrepparttar 110219 picture, or do whatever is fun and right forrepparttar 110220 book. Later on, as you read stories, read slowly and stop now and then to think aloud about what you've read. Fromrepparttar 110221 time your child is able to talk, ask him such questions aboutrepparttar 110222 story as, "What do you think will happen next?" or "Do you know what a palace is?" Answer his questions and,if you think he doesn't understand.

Don't worry if you occasionally breakrepparttar 110223 flow of a story to make clear something that is important. However, don't stop so often thatrepparttar 110224 child loses track of what is happening inrepparttar 110225 story.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Anil Vij is the creator of the ultimate parenting toolbox,which has helped parents all over the world raise smarter,healthier and happier children ==> http://www.expertsonparenting.com Sign up for Anil's Experts On Parenting Newsletter - just send a blank email ===> mailto: parentingnews@aweber.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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