Blank 5x5 bingo card11/28/2023 ![]() I could see their expressions: Ugh! Twenty-five books?!? Then, I explained to the kids how it was going to work. I adapted it to create a new reading bingo card by filling in each of the twenty-five squares with different types of books for the kids to read: a book about a boy, a book about a girl, a book about a dog, a book written by a woman, a book chosen by Mom, your favorite book, etc. I have a blank bingo card that I made using the table feature of Microsoft Word. However, it did give me a push in the right direction. ![]() No big surprise there since I rarely use our materials the way they’re intended. Once I pulled out the card, I realized that it wasn’t going to work, as it was, for my purposes. Last week, I remembered a resource that I’ve saved for a few years that I thought might help with this: a reading bingo card! The only problem with letting them select their own books is that they keep selecting the same ones over and over. We’re still doing Phonics Pathways, but I’m more or less using it to go over different blends and digraphs with the kids on the whiteboard and, then, letting them put into practice what they’ve learned by reading the books they select. This is going well and they read those book so much better than reading random phrases or nonsensical sentences from Phonics Pathways. I’ve been letting Josh and Megan pick out books from their collections for our reading practice time.
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