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How Parents Can Step Back, Pause and Be Curious
The key is to shift from an immediate problem-solving or corrective mindset to one of investigation and empathy.
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Acknowledge and Validate:
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- Pause Your Own Reaction: Take a deep breath. Notice any frustration or impatience you might be feeling. Remind yourself that this is an opportunity for learning, not a personal failing for your child (or you!).
- “I see you’re having a tricky moment with that word/sentence.” This validates their struggle without judgment.
- “It looks like that part is a bit confusing.” Again, an observation, not an accusation.
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Use Open-Ended Questions (The “Curious” Part):
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- “What just happened there?” (Instead of “Why did you get that wrong?”)
- “What are you noticing about that word/sentence?”
- “Where in that sentence did it start to feel tricky?”
- “What were you thinking right before that stumble?”
- “Do you remember anything we talked about that might help with a word like this?”
- “What do you think that word might mean, just from looking at the picture or the other words around it?”
- “How does that sentence sound to you?” (Sometimes just hearing it again helps)
- “Are you feeling tired/hungry/distracted right now?” (Directly addressing physiological or environmental factors)
- “Is this story interesting to you right now, or are we just pushing through?” (Gauge engagement)
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Model Problem-Solving (Together):
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- “Let’s be detectives together.” This frames it as a shared challenge.
- “If I were trying to figure that out, I might first look at the beginning sound… or look for a small word I know inside the bigger word…” (Think aloud, showing your process).
- “Let’s re-read the sentence before it. Sometimes that helps us get the meaning.”
- “Should we take a quick break? Get a drink of water? Then come back to it with fresh eyes?” (Acknowledging fatigue/distraction).
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Emphasize Process Over Product:
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- “It’s okay to get stuck. That’s how our brains grow stronger.”
- “You’re doing a great job of trying to figure it out.”
- “Learning to read is like learning to ride a bike โ sometimes you wobble, and that’s totally normal.”