Reading the log is a great tool to help your teacher, parents and children. From the first grade of elementary school, my children were asked to fill in the reading log as part of their homework. Therefore, I created a free print browsing log suitable for elementary school students.
In our elementary school, the following reading log format is usually used. In our school, we oblige every person to read at least 20 minutes a day. It will be distributed on Monday and will expire on Friday.
This reading log is scheduled on a daily basis and includes part of each assignment session on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. It also includes the title, author, how to read the page, and part of the parent's signature.
This reading log is similar to the above log, but the explanation is not included. Use this log if you have different reading requirements for reading plans, such as 15 minutes.
Here I will show some daily reading logs that are most suitable for 2 weeks homework. These browsing records will be distributed to students on Monday and will expire next Friday.
This viewing log contains sections for the days of the week, titles, minutes, and guardians' initials. Instructions to read overnight 20 minutes are as follows
This browsing log has a section of the day, title, author, minutes of minutes, parental initials section. Instructions to read overnight 20 minutes are as follows
This viewing log contains sections for the days of the week, titles, minutes, and guardians' initials. Read instructions for at least 8 days during the 20-minute homework
This browsing log has a section of the day, title, author, minutes of minutes, parental initials section. Read instructions for at least 8 days during the 20-minute homework
If you want to track your child's reading, please use these monthly reading log templates.
You can find free, printable reading logs in various formats below. To open the PDF and print it, just click the title. Please refer to each and judge which is suitable for your needs. Some are daily reading logs, some include comment fields, and many are themes. Reading logs are designed for first grade, second grade and other beginner levels
A sophomore teacher from California, Shannon Griffin used this reading log to tell us that he began using the reading log last year, because he was "tired" of the standard weekly reading logs I used last year. After searching the internet she found a reading log instead of Moses and fell in love with it. "I like this diversity and I do not treat it as a chore but I think that it might excite students to read at home," she told us. "I am also a mother and I have worked hard to make my son interested in reading, so I know this kind of struggle," she received positive comments from her parents. It not only encourages children to read in a unique way, she says to solve the problem that it also can not obtain books at home, which may be a problem for some students Hmm.
Elementary school children are hard to learn to spell. As children more read in first and second grade, they started to improve their spelling skills. These spelling workbooks introduce some basic rules that will help you understand consonants and vowels, mute E, add suffixes and prefixes, and learn the basics for building words I will try. Most importantly, weekly printed materials are available for home use and classroom use. Children choose which pages to complete and extend their spelling base. As new ideas evolve, these workbooks continue to improve to help interpret esoteric words and spell them out.