As you can see... we are still working on writing the date. He hasn't, by any means, mastered letters let alone numbers. But it is coming along.
He'd not all that motivated today, though. Immunizations yesterday have left him a bit pooped. I don't blame him.
We are making a Color Book... the first entry is red.
Take a peek under the red crayon in this picture. He wrote 'red' without prompting. He also recognizes it on sight, now too... I think 'red' may be the first work that he has read! (lol)
We were driving the other day, and we went past a CVS. Nick read outloud "C V S, Mom? What does CVS spell?"
"C V S," I said.
"No, Mom!" he was sort of irritated at this point, "What does it say?"
"C V S." I replied.
"MOM! What does it say?" he hollered at me.
"It doesn't say anything, Nick. It's just the letters C and V and S." I replied (a bit frustrated myself.)
"Oh... Okay." he answered me.
We are goobers.
But good to know that he understands that a series of letter put together means a word. Yippee!
Also, last night, as part of Language Arts, we read Cinderella. He then had to answer some questions about the story at the end. For the most part he did well, there were some things that I had to "translate" to him, and make just a bit more understandable. For example:
"And now her two sisters knew she had been the unknown princess they had so admired. They threw themselves at her feet to beg her forgiveness for all their ill treatmens. Cinderella took them up and embraced them and said she forgave them with all her heart."
Yeah, he didn't quite get that. So... that turned into:
"And now her two sisters knew she had been the unknown princess they liked so much. They threw themselves at her feet to say they were so sorry for all the mean things they had done. Cinderella helped them up and hugged them and said that she forgave them and loved them very much."
Close enough, eh? And of course, I did read the original thoroughly... but just switched it up when he didn't quite know how to answer.
But he has alwasy been really good at recollecting stories and plots. Whether it is from a movie, a story book, or just an experience.
Good Mommy, you get a cookie. (Wheat free, of course!)