Oh, you ladies are so, so helpful! Thank you!
Reading through all of your comments has been a sweet blessing. It's also helped me to realize that it's probably more *me* than *him.*
I think I'm simply tired of this early reading stage (not just from him, but from all of my sweet children over the last 5 years). I long to see progress with him - in many ways because my next two little ladies are right on his heels. I'm also putting unnecessary pressure on myself to get him reading because he's not where his sisters were at, he has a hard time at AWANA since he can't practice his verses on his own like other boys in his group, and many other little reasons that add up to way too much comparing on my part. And, I'm just ready for him to move on. I needed a new dose of perspective and patience, and God is using you ladies to bring just what I needed in this situation.
To answer some of the questions -
I think what he really liked about Logic of English Foundations was the multi-sensory approach. He really enjoyed the games, snacks, and "fun" that were incorporated into it. It did a good job of teaching him to blend sounds together and to decode the words. Another thing I liked about it were the very gentle handwriting lessons, as well as some of the rules that I had never heard of before, but were so helpful to me. I truly think it was the right thing at the time, but as you progress through the levels it gets to be more and more, and the lessons take longer. There's copywork and dictation and spelling and writing on top of reading, and those things are already wonderfully taken care of with HOD. So, it just got to be too much, and took too much of my time. If I would've slowed down a bit and not been so impatient - that may have helped. But, again, I wanted to keep trekking along.
![Embarassed :oops:](./images/smilies/icon_redface.gif)
The next level has kids reading from real books, which I think he would love, but all the other aspects of the program just seem like too much to me right now.
One of the reasons I have always liked The Reading Lesson is that it is so simple. You just sit on the couch snuggled together - work through a couple pages - and you're done. I could certainly incorporate some of the games he's enjoyed playing, but at some point all the games and treats need to come to an end, and I want him to love reading (or at least like it) without all of that. So, at this point I think I'm going to put The Reading Lesson away for him - and to help with my sanity.
![Shocked :shock:](./images/smilies/icon_eek.gif)
My main concern with this is that I'm uncertain of when he would have enough phonics/reading instruction. I've read on these boards numerous times of kids struggling when they get a little older because they never "finished" the reading instruction necessary. I'm not really wording that correctly, but an example would be when others have gone through Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons there seems to be a gap in their learning!?
Today I grabbed a few Level 1 readers that we have, let him choose his favorite, and he read from it for about ten minutes. He loved it! If everyday went like today did, I would be one happy mama. His fluency still really struggled, but we worked through it. I read some and he read some, and he didn't want to stop. Every now and then we stopped and talked about a few things - compound words, how the y said the e sound at the end of the word, etc. - I'm just not sure how confident I am in doing it this way without the "hand-holding" that I prefer. But I really, really like the idea of boosting his enjoyment of reading by actually reading.
Thank you, again! I really appreciate all the wisdom and encouragement each of you share.
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)