Learning To Read

I don’t remember learning how to read. I also don’t remember anyone reading to me at home. My first book. Finishing a book. I know someone read to me though, probably my mom. I had books around me from early on.

I do remember tracing my finger over lower case and upper case glitter letters, one letter per workbook. Aa Apple. The letters on the cover were dusted with red glitter. Each day before we opened it, we traced. Inside the pages we practiced writing each letter, matched letters to pictures and whatever else is blurred in my mind. When we finished the book, we took it home and started the next one. Bb Ball.

I do remember meeting with our teacher in groups. Reading about running and dogs and a kid named Jack. Easy words like tip and tap and hat and bat. Certificates with scented stickers awarded milestones, whatever they may have been.

I do remember listening to Mrs. Jones read Charlotte’s Web in second grade. She cried at the end. What did I read? I don’t recall anything, except for the book I received the last day of school for perfect attendance. The Ghost of Windy Hill. My own book to keep forever and read over summer break. I went home, finished it, and figured out the mystery before the story ended.

I do remember reading Little House on the Prairie (all of them), Beverly Cleary’s Ramona books, Encyclopedia Brown, Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing, nonfiction books about Amelia Earhart and Annie Oakley. Since then, I’ve been known to be the one who is always reading.

I can’t imaging not knowing how to read. Since I can remember (or not), I’ve read whatever came my way. Cereal boxes, junk mail, JC Penney catalogs, magazines, books, dictionaries, the phone book…

March 6, 2025

5 thoughts on “Learning To Read

  1. Oh, Alice, I love how you mined your memories for these small moments of learning to read. We must be around the same age, because I also gobbled up these same books – and especially the JC Penney’s catalog!

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    1. This realization came from a discussion with another teacher. We couldn’t remember actually learning how to read, but we could name so many favorite books.

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  2. I really enjoyed this post. I don’t really remember how I learned to read either. I do remember reading Green Eggs and Ham (… or maybe I just memorized all of the words?) to anyone that would come to our house. I do remember my second grade teacher gathering us on the carpet and reading Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing and laughing hysterically. I don’t remember reading actual books until third grade. Third grade was when I discovered Ramona the Pest and The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe.

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