One of my favorite lines in a Dr. Seuss begins with
HOP
POP
We like to hop.
We like to hop
on top of Pop.
The lines themselves were so silly and conjuring up the image of me jumping on my Dad always made me laugh. What I wasn't fully aware of was how the use of repetition and rhyme crystallized the image even more so. It was the joyous nonsense that made reading Dr. Seuss so enjoyable. All of his books captured what childhood was for me: a period of creativity and wonderment with language. Moreover, Dr. Seuss was a master of crafting the perfect image and word together. His drawings are iconic and the way he combines words and images really resonated with me and with many children who were just learning to read.
In Learning to Read The Great Debate, Jeanne S. Chall gives a comprehensive overview of early basal readers for children. She not only gives an account of how these readers evolved but also the influence that shaped their development. Looking at the pictures of phonics instruction books makes me realize how innovate Dr. Seuss books were. If we look at those books as "phonics" books then Hop on Pop develops phonemic awareness in a way that is so memorable and fun.
One of the more interesting debates that was presented in Ch. 1 was how many, which ones, and at what frequency should beginning phonics words early readers should be exposed to.
Some insist that the child acquire a considerable amount of phonics knowledge before he begins reading words, sentences, and stories. Others suggest combining phonics instruction with the reading of stories from conventional basal readers and library books...[p]robably more important is the number of phonic elements and rules to be learned: some give the child a heavier "phonic load" than others (16).This is very telling and shows the that a child's beginning stages of reading and phonics acquisition is by no means based on a natural progressive scale that is scientifically measured. What I wonder about is how technology affects this process? It seems like children are now increasingly exposed to a wide range of words at the touch of a fingerprint; smartphones, tablets, and interactive toys are all clamoring for a child's attention. How does this affect their reading acquisition?
All i know that, if you wanted to keep ME happy as a kid, all you had to do was give me a Dr. Seuss book.

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