All stock codes associated to this product
708431211568, 2115690914, 21156-90914
Use your Tag Reader to bring this story to life! Read and use your imagination to help Bloo win the Golden Paddleball Grand Prize. But, first you've got to find a way to get Cheese off his back so he can focus! After the story, play leveled learning activities that help build vocabulary and reading comprehension skills. Children can earn rewards and parents can connect the Tag Reader to the online LeapFrog Learning Path to see what their child is playing and learning.
& Cartoon Network (s08)
Introduces:
Short and long vowels
Vowel pairs
Sight words
Question words
Teaches
Listening and Reading Comprehension
As children develop comprehension of books read aloud or independently, they explore the uses and functions of written language. They begin to construct meaning, eventually applying critcal skills to make inferences and draw conclusions.
Vocabulary
While infants and toddlers learn vocabulary by memory, older children use word structure and context to help understand the meaning of a word. They identify synonyms and antonyms. They use prefixes, suffixes and base words to build their own vocabulary.
Phonics Skills
Before they can read independently, children must learn the relationship of letters to their sounds and be able to distinguish individual sounds, or phonemes, within words. Phonics skills help children sounds out new words (If I can read "pot", then I can read "hot" and "spot").
Word Building
To read and write, children must understand how individual letter sounds blend together to make words. Experimenting with building words, such as changing mat to cat to rat, helps with reading and spelling.
Word Recognition
As children learn to read, they must be able to "decode" the words they don't know- to translate strings of letters into words. Eventually they can recognize common words that can't be sounded out (the, said, she).
Book and Print Basics
A child's early experiences with books greatly influence his ability to learn to read. Reading together helps a child learn how to turn pages one at a time and that text moves from left to right. Advanced readers learn how to use books for research.