Thursday, September 22, 2022

Teach Your Monster to Read

 


            Reading is a skill that is imperative to success as we all know. Students are pressured and reminded daily at school of how important it is and I’m sure at times have felt defeated when or if they struggle to make sense of the all the sounds and graphemes that are introduced to them. The pressure to be a good reader can at times make reading not fun or enjoyable and why would a kid want to do something that is not a good time?

The Teach Your Monster to Read site - https://www.teachyourmonster.org/ helps remove that pressure as they foster independence within the program. Teachers or parents start by creating a group of students and printing or downloading their personal passwords to log in. When students log in, they immediately are greeted by a friendly automated voice that walks them through personalizing their monster and then on to their first adventure. The graphics are bright and whimsical, and the voice-over has a slight British accent. The instructions are clear however it does encourage the user to click around and learn to navigate through trial and error. The instructions given are a bit redundant and the four activities initially introduced become monotonous for a reader, but a non-reader may find comfort and success in knowing exactly what to do as they progress through the levels. Students are given in-game incentives for completing tasks. Feedback is immediate and if a mistake is made the rigor is decreased to ensure success. Students are introduced to letter names and sounds initially and then progress into diphthongs and digraphs. This portion of the site is intended for non-readers or beginning readers.

For students that can read and are learning to read for enjoyment, they can explore Teach Your Monster Reading for Fun. In this game module, students via their monster venture into a Monster city where they must read books and perform tasks to gain incentives and save the city. The books on this website are know books that can be purchased through Usborne Publishing. This game mode gives students more freedom to explore and includes scaffolded rigor. Students can choose to read the adventure prompts for themselves or click on the conversation bubbles to have it read for them. 

                The Teach Your Monster to Read site was developed by the Usborne Foundation which is a charity set up by the founder of Usborne Publishing to encourage and support early literacy. The site boasts that the content is created by academic experts and is trusted by teachers.  This site has won many awards and recognitions to support literacy.

*Contribution by Heidi Cameron

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