Reluctant Readers discussion
11 Yr old son.
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Bonnieandsean
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Jul 01, 2011 04:47AM

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When the Lights Go Out http://max-whenlightsgoout.blogspot.com
Books for Boys Blog http://booksandboys.blogspot.com
Video When the Lights Go Out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wfSEkG...
Video - Barney and the Runaway http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0l7ZU...
My Youtube Videos http://www.youtube.com/user/Maxbooks100

I was talking to the mother of a reluctant 10 yr old reader the other day and she said that if one of her son's friends recommended a book to him he was much more likely to read it. She also said that if he'd seen a film, based on a book, she could persuade him to read it too (She was talking about Diary of a Wimpy Kid). He is reading my book for 7-9 year olds (about a school for super villains) on Authonomy at the moment. He likes the idea of writing a review and helping me with it. Your son is very welcome to do that too. I'll give you the URL if he's interested.
Other books i know boys of this age group love - Skulduggery Pleasant or Tunnels.
I really hope this helps.
With best wishes
Kim


Hi Bonnie. Here's the URL. http://www.authonomy.com/books/30342/...
I had planned to take St Viper's off authonomy soon, but if your son does fancy reading it/ helping me let me know and i'll keep it on there. You will have to register to write a review (this is to stop writers cheating!!!).
With best wishes
Kim


This book has some really good suggestions from a teacher (and mother) who worked with reluctant readers.
Another thought, particularly around age 11, is to have his eyes checked for far-sightedness, and if possible, by an optometrist who is a member of http://covd.org/ who can check other aspects of vision such as whether his eyes work together, whether they can track across the page, maintain focus for a length of time, etc. School screenings are just a quick check for nearsightedness. A lot of subtle problems can make reading unpleasant. Even regular optometrists don't always check for the things a COVD optometrist will, yet those aspects of vision can make a huge difference in whether a kid feels like reading is a huge chore.
Here's a book on it:




and Barrington Stoke


Amber Harvey
http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/...
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