THE PARENTING SECRETS SHARED BY BILL GATES, RICHARD BRANSON AND WARREN BUFFET.

Super kids, great kids are products of super parenting, great parenting.In the making of great kids, parents must be part of the equation. No luck is involved, it requires work, smart work.

Look at the most successful people in the planet earth: Bill Gates, Richard Branson, and Warren Buffet. It was always the vision to create business and deliver a lot of value to people that made them rich.

Parents should rather learn from these people because parenting is a venture. If we want success from parenting then we must approach parenting with a business mindset. We must give it a business approach.

Think about it.

These people have a clear vision of what they want their business to become. They have an end in mind, a vision. They have an idea of what the business will look like when it is done.

Likewise, parents should take their wards as their businesses and see who we want them to become. Most parents don’t have a clue of who their wards will become.

THE FIRST GIFTS will help you with that. It provides a clear vision of who our kids become when they are out of our sights. It tells us what gifts to impart to them to become who they are meant to be.

Here is a fact: A business looks and behave like its owner. So kids looks and behave like their parents. Better kids comes from better parents.

Another fact: The biggest investment in a child are words not money. Our children will always remember your words but spend your money.

Money is good but words are valuable to our children.

The Choice is Yours.

Watch out for THE FIRST GIFTS.

>> Click here to for a simple, step-by-step program that can help your child learn to read, and watch a video of a 2 year old child reading

ARE YOU READY FOR THE ROYAL WEDDING?

ROYALS

With just two days to go before the Royal Wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, we’re very excited to share our gracious new regal reads with you. Much-loved series Rainbow Magic is back with a brilliant new story all about Meghan the Wedding Sparkle Fairy, and for fans of The Princess Diaries, the hilarious Royals is sure to make you laugh. Whether you’ll be watching the Royal Wedding on Saturday or curling up with one of these books, we’d love to see your photos on Facebook.

GREAT WOMEN

2018 marks 100 years since some women were given the right to vote in the UK. Scholastic Book Clubs are celebrating the work of suffragettes and other great women in history with an incredible selection of amazing stories for all children to be inspired by, all available at discount prices.

GRACIOUS BOOK PACKS

How will you be spending the weekend? If the Royal Wedding isn’t your thing, we’ve still got plenty of books to keep you interested! Gracious book pack is as popular as ever, and we’ve got several guides and activity books to keep the kids busy – and maybe even the grown-ups too!

3 FOR 2

Encourage reading for pleasure with the very best new and classic children’s books – all 3 for the price of 2 (with the cheapest book free). This hand-picked collection has something for every child of any ability – from voracious readers to the most reluctant. Offer ends 2nd June 2018.

Also the best reading plan is here for you.

JUST WHAT THE DOCTOR ORDERED!

This week is #MentalHealthAwarenessWeek and many parents, teachers and children are concerned about the impact of the digital world on mental health. In Dr Christian’s Guide to Growing Up Online, Dr Christian tackles all the tricky questions about growing up in a digital world – from cyberbullying and self-esteem to body-image and binge-watching TV – and much more. Anti-bullying charity, Ditch the Label, provided the top worries from children and Dr Christian answers them in a practical, responsible and accessible way in the ultimate online survival guide.

Here, Dr Christian reveals his top tips to help children stay safe online…

Here, Dr Christian reveals his top tips to help children stay safe online…

Build an honest and open relationship with your child where no topic is off limits so your child will feel supported and not isolated if problems arise. Ask yourself “could my child come and ask me anything?”

Keep Informed

Be aware of what your children are exposed to and share practical rules to stay safe. For instance, set their accounts to private and never post personal details (name, home address, school, photos of your school uniform).

Lead by example

Help your child have a healthy relationship with the digital world by showing how you use it responsibly, by protecting your passwords and personal information, and not posting anything online that might embarrass you, your family or others. Have rules about spending time together as a family.

Keep Informed

Be aware of what your children are exposed to and share practical rules to stay safe. For instance, set their accounts to private and never post personal details (name, home address, school, photos of your school uniform).

Lead by example

Help your child have a healthy relationship with the digital world by showing how you use it responsibly, by protecting your passwords and personal information, and not posting anything online that might embarrass you, your family or others. Have rules about spending time together as a family.

Be Smart

Make sure that your child knows to never send photos to or agree to meet face-to-face with an online friend, until they’ve checked with you. Remember – people who you don’t know online are strangers, just like in real life. They could be anyone so you need to keep safe.

Differentiate between real life and digital life

It’s important to show that images online are often doctored, edited, photoshopped and rarely resemble real life. For children, this is a very important thing to explain.

Champion Privacy

Help your children understand that nothing they do online is private. If you wouldn’t want your teacher, your future employer or your gran to see what you are posting or messaging, don’t share it. Act like the world is watching – even your gran!

Trust

Respect the fact that privacy goes hand in hand with your emerging teen’s growing independence but make sure that you are available to help if they are in trouble. Remember it’s in the nature of teens to take risks – learning by mistakes is important but you can help ensure that these mistakes are only minor ones!

Keep Informed

Be aware of what your children are exposed to and share practical rules to stay safe. For instance, set their accounts to private and never post personal details (name, home address, school, photos of your school uniform).

Lead by example

Help your child have a healthy relationship with the digital world by showing how you use it responsibly, by protecting your passwords and personal information, and not posting anything online that might embarrass you, your family or others. Have rules about spending time together as a family.

Be Smart

Make sure that your child knows to never send photos to or agree to meet face-to-face with an online friend, until they’ve checked with you. Remember – people who you don’t know online are strangers, just like in real life. They could be anyone so you need to keep safe.

Differentiate between real life and digital life

It’s important to show that images online are often doctored, edited, photoshopped and rarely resemble real life. For children, this is a very important thing to explain.

Champion Privacy

Help your children understand that nothing they do online is private. If you wouldn’t want your teacher, your future employer or your gran to see what you are posting or messaging, don’t share it. Act like the world is watching – even your gran!

Trust

Respect the fact that privacy goes hand in hand with your emerging teen’s growing independence but make sure that you are available to help if they are in trouble. Remember it’s in the nature of teens to take risks – learning by mistakes is important but you can help ensure that these mistakes are only minor ones!

Find out much more in Dr Christian’s Guide to Growing Up Online
– out now in paperback and ebook

3 Tips to Teach Your child How to Read

Learning to read at a young age is important for the development of the child. It helps them develop a better understand of their surroundings, allows them to gather information from printed materials, and provides them with a wonderful source of entertainment when they read stories and rhymes. Children develop at different rates, and some children will develop reading skills quicker than other children; however, what’s important is that as the parent, you are keenly aware of your child’s maturity and reading level to provide them with appropriate books and activities to help them improve.

As parents, you are the most important teacher for your children. You will introduce your child to books and reading. Below we have some tips to help you teach your child to read.

Teach Your Child How to Read Tip #1

Teach your child alphabet letters and sounds at the same time. Studies have shown that children learn best when they are taught the letter names and letter sounds at the same time. In one study, 58 preschool children were randomly assigned to receive instructions in letter names and sounds, letter sound only, or numbers (control group). The results of this study are consistent with past research results in that it found children receiving letter name and sound instruction were most likely to learn the sounds of letters whose names included cues to their sounds. [1]

When teaching your child the letter sounds, have them slowly trace the letter, while saying the sound of the letter at the same time. For example, if you were teaching your child the letter “A”, you would say:

“The letter A makes the /A/ (ah) sound.”

Then have your child say the /A/ sound while tracing the letter with his or her index finger.

Teaching a Child How to Read Tip #2

When teaching your child to read, always emphasize with them that the proper reading order should be from left to right, and top to bottom. To adults, this may seem so basic that anyone should know it. However, our children are not born with the knowledge that printed text should be read from left to right and top to bottom, and this is why you’ll sometimes see children reading from right to left instead – because they were never explicitly taught to read from left to right. When teaching your child how to read, always emphasize this point with them.

Teach Your Child How to Read Tip #3

Teach final consonant blends first. Teaching words such “at” and “and” can lead your child directly to learning words that rhyme with these. For example, for “at”, you can have:

Lat
Pat
Mat
Cat
Sat
Bat
Spat
Chat

For “and”, you can have these rhyming words:

Sand
Band
Land
Hand
Stand
Bland
Brand
Grand
and so on…

You can start teaching blends once your child has learned the sounds of some consonants and short vowel sounds. You don’t need to wait until your child has mastered the sounds of all the letters before teaching blends.

Learning to read is a long process, but it doesn’t have to be a difficult process. Broken down into intuitive and logical steps, a child as young as two years old can learn to read, and older children can accomplish even more.

>> Click here to for a simple, step-by-step program that can help your child learn to read, and watch a video of a 2 year old child reading

Flashcards: My kids’ Sidekicks to Reading

Flashcards are cards bearing information as words or numbers used in classroom drills or in one on one study.

Flashcards are one of the most effective way for young learners to study and retain factual knowledge especially when they are used smartly.

Flashcards can be an excellent learning and teaching tool to introduce new vocabulary or drilling familiar words. They prove to be smart and fun way to start reading.

The best time to start teaching kids to read is between the ages of 3 months and 3 years old. The younger a child is the more quickly they can learn to read.

Kids’ visual pathway is developed by 3 months old so I start by that time if I were you. Most kids begin letters recognition at age 2 and 3. It means you can start introduction of alphabet around 2 years old.

Flashcards are wonderful way of introducing your kids to the world of jolly phonics.

You can get your free alphabet and number flash cards here on this blog. It is a 58 individual flashcards, includes bonus cursive cards, and are beautifully illustrated.

The 58 cards are compiled by Reading specialist Sarah Shepherd. This set of large flash cards is an excellent way to reinforce learning letters and their sounds and symbol relationship.

Click Here to download it.

Early Literacy In Children: The Literacy Gap

Thirteen million (13,000,000) words are available for children in underprivileged homes as against forty five million (45,000,000) words needed for children to be literate by age 4.

So children in underprivileged homes are hearing or will hear thirty million (30,000,000) fewer words by age 3.

Underprivileged children have fallen behind even before they start preschool.

Hear me, 86%-98% of our children’s vocabulary is learned from their parents at home as they talk, sing, read, write and play with the children everyday.

The most important activity in boosting children’s literacy level 6 times over is READING AT LEAST 15 MINUTES A DAY TO THEM.

But here is another catch to it; what if YOUR CHILD IS THE ONE READING TO YOU AT AGE 3 and has the privilege to visit the library which gives her or him 50% more rare words in books; access to 45 story times a week with free library card to over 28 library locations to check out 30 books at a time and 124,101 Children’s picture books.

Discover it below.

For the best reading program parents like you are using.

Teach Your Child To Read

Video Reveals How To Teach Your
Child Aged 2-9 To Quickly Read At
Home. Click below to watch video

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Best Way to Teach Kids to Read

By: http://9a51520k52y-atemm7uclbr5hu.hop.clickbank.net/

What’s the best way to teach children to read? According to the National Reading Panel, “teaching children to manipulate phonemes in words was highly effective under a variety of teaching conditions with a variety of learners across a range of grade and age levels and that teaching phonemic awareness to children significantly improves their reading more than instruction that lacks any attention to Phonemic Awareness.” This is a statement made by the National Reading Panel (NRP) in their report titled “TEACHING CHILDREN TO READ: An Evidence-Based Assessment of the Scientific Research Literature on Reading and Its Implications for Reading Instruction.”

Phonemic Awareness instruction was selected for review by the NRP in their report because studies have identified phonemic awareness and letter knowledge as two of the best predictors of how well children will learn to read in their first 2 years of entering school. There is strong Scientific evidence to suggest that phonemic awareness instructions are an important part in helping children develop reading skills.

One study discussed the presence of phonemic awareness in Austrian children aged 6 to 7 that were unable to read when first entering school. This study found that many children had not one correct response in their test of a simple vowel substitution task. However, a few children who exhibited high phonemic awareness scored close to perfect on this same task. The study further stated that “there was a specific predictive relationship between initial phonemic awareness differences and success in learning to read and to spell.” Even more importantly, the study indicated that it was phonemic awareness abilities, and not IQ, that predicted the accuracy of reading and spelling at the end of grade one. Children with high phonemic awareness at the beginning of grade one had high reading and spelling achievements at the end of grade one, compared to some children with low phonemic awareness who had difficulties learning to read and spell.

In the National Reading Panel report, they also determined that the beneficial effects of phonemic awareness on reading lasts well beyond the period of training. While phonemic awareness instructions are proven to significantly help children learn reading, it is not a complete reading program. What it does, is provide children with a foundational knowledge base of the alphabet language. The NRP analysis also showed that phonics instructions produces significant benefits for students from kindergarten through grade 6, and is also helpful for children with learning to read difficulties.

Children who are taught with phonics and phonemic awareness instructions are consistently able to decode, read, and spell, and even demonstrated significant improvement in their ability to comprehend text. Even older children who receive these similar teachings improved their ability to decode and spell. The NRP made a key statement saying that “conventional wisdom has suggested that kindergarten students might not be ready for phonics instruction, this assumption was not supported by the data. The effects of systematic early phonics instruction were significant and substantial in kindergarten and the 1st grade, indicating that systematic phonics programs should be implemented at those age and grade levels.

However, I would like to further expand on that by saying that children as young as two years old can learn to read through phonics and phonemic awareness instructions. If a young child can speak, then they should be able to learn to read, even if they are as young as two years old. In fact, I have proven this with my own children. We started teaching our daughter at 2 years and 8 months, and she was very capable at reading by the time she was just 2 years and 11 months old.

CLICK HERE TO LEARN MORE:

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This Story ‘ll Change Your Child

One day, as a small child, Thomas Edison came home from school and gave a paper to his mother.

He said to her, “Mom, my teacher gave this paper to me and told me only you are to read it. What does it say?”

Her eyes welled with tears as she read the letter out loud to her child…

“Your son is a genius. This school is too small for him and doesn’t have good enough teachers to train him. Please teach him yourself.”

Many years after Edison’s mother had died, he became one of the greatest inventors of the century

Now for the mind blowing part…

One day he was going through a closet and he found the folded letter that his old teacher wrote his mother that day.

He opened it…

The actual message written on the letter was:

“Your son is Mentally Deficient. We cannot let him attend our school anymore. He is Expelled.”

Waves of emotion washed over him and tears rolled down his cheek as he read the letter to himself. That very day, he wrote down in his diary…
“Thomas A. Edison was a mentally deficient child whose mother turned him into the genius of the century.”

Listen, this true story is a perfect example that no teacher will ever care more about your child’s education than you as a mother
The most crucial thing we can do for our child is teach them the joy of reading, at the earliest age possible.

There is an easy reading program designed to specifically for mothers (oops fathers also)like you, to quickly have your child reading better than all other children their age.
Even if they’re as young as 2, don’t know their alphabet at all and currently show zero interest in reading whatsoever.
YES! I Want My Child To Become A Genius click the link below

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Gracious Book Packs…

Want to know what everyone is reading right now? Look no further. Here are some of our newest bestselling books on offer to stock up your bookshelves. We’ve got everything you need and all at incredible prices too!

Call 08030443609

Email giwuoha30@gmail.com

Whatsapp 07014910335

To place your order.