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From YouTube: Well Read | Early Literacy (Sing)
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A
Welcome
to
well-read
a
program
about
a
little
bit
of
this
and
a
little
bit
of
that
at
your
Ames
Public
Library
hi
I'm
Jerry
hi
Youth
Services
Manager
at
the
Ames
Public
Library
here,
to
welcome
you
to
our
last
of
five
series
of
all
of
our
early
literacy
practices
and
skills
today,
and
it
happens
to
be
all
about
singing
and
we
all
have
singing
voices.
Some
of
them
are
bad.
A
Some
of
them
are
good,
but
we
all
can
sing
and
children
love
to
hear
that,
whether
you
are
bad
or
good,
come
to
my
toddler
time
and
you'll
find
out
with
me
so
anyway,
today
I
have
my
musical
expert.
What
for
our
singing
practice,
and
also
we
are
going
to
talk
about
phonological
awareness,
which
is
an
early
literacy
skill,
so
welcome
Chris,
hi
Jerry?
How
are
you
today
I'm
here.
B
One
of
the
things
I
wanted
to
say
is
that
I
do
love
to
sing
I'm,
not
always
great
at
it
either,
but
I
have
had
music
in
my
life
for
as
long
as
I
can
remember,
my
mom
was
a
singer.
She
did
a
lot
of
stage
productions
all
through
high
school
and
so
on.
She
would
have
gone
on
to
be
a
professional
singer
if
had
been
her
choice
but
and
said
she
got
married
had
five
kids,
so
we
grew
up
with
piano
and
singing
and
songwriting
around
the
house.
B
B
Yeah
I
think
that
way,
I
think
in
rhyme,
oftentimes,
I
I,
don't
know
that
they're
always
picture
booksellers,
but
so
rhyme.
One
of
the
reasons
we
like
rhyming
books
and
kids
and
their
they
actually
are
very
hard
to
do
to
get
it
right,
but
it's
for
the
phonological
awareness
so
before
we
do
anything
else,
I'm
going
to
have
you
play
a
little
short
game
with
me.
Okay,
it's
really
easy.
I'm
going
to
start
with
a
three
letter
word
and
I.
Want
you
to
change
one
letter
so
say
the
word
pan.
A
B
B
Nice
rhyme,
mother,
Goose
rhymes
they
come
on
a
very
little
early
age.
You
can
start
doing
those
to
your
children
when
they're
infants
and
you
can
read
your
favorites.
You
can
make
them
up
as
you
go.
You
can
do
any
any
type
of
thing,
but
rhyming
in
your
house
is
very,
very
important
for
children.
They've
had
a
lot
of
studies
that
say
the
kids
that
are
fine
illogically
aware
are
probably
the
ones
that
can
get
their
reading
skills.
That's
one
of
the
most
important
item,
alright,
so
well,.
A
B
B
B
A
B
A
And
again,
the
more
times
you
hear
it
the
more
times
you
possibly
could
repeat
the
sound
right.
B
A
B
B
Yeah,
we
have
a
lot
of
things:
kids
to
tap
out
a
beat
with
the
sticks
with
the
tambourine,
with
the
drums
shakers,
even
the
beanbags.
You
know
passing
something
back
and
forth
back
and
forth.
It
helps
you
slow
down
those
words
again.
You
start
to
relate
something
like
a
beat
to
each
movement
and
action.
Rhymes
are
great
too.
They
do.
B
A
B
They
probably
don't
realize
they're
learning
right,
they
probably
don't
realize
it,
but
this
is
why
it's
important
to
do
this
around
your
children.
Just
like
we
talk
to
our
children,
we
read
to
them.
We
should
sing
to
our
children
yeah
and
the
more
you
sing,
the
more
they're
going
to
catch
on,
and
it
helps
in
a
variety
of
ways.
It
it
gives
you
ways
to
get
activities
done.
You
know
it's
not
just
even
the
reading
things,
but
my
kids
had
a
teacher
who
they
sang
the
clean
up
song.
B
A
And
and
I
know
we
just
kind
of
touched
on
the
mother,
Goose
rhymes,
but
there's
lots
of
books
that
go
along
that
have
a
lot
of
rhymes
too
and
I
have
to
confess.
If
I
have
a
book
that
I
know
is
supposed
to
have
a
rhyme,
because
some
of
us
don't
always
have
that
natural
rhyming
instinct
I
come
to
crisp
and
I.
Haven't.
B
B
So
first
off
I
brought
some
dr.
Seuss
books
because
he
was
a
master
at
teaching
phonological
awareness.
He
was
you
know,
rhymes,
don't
have
to
be
sensical,
they
could
be
Seussical
almost
were
there.
There
are
odd
words,
they
may
not
be
a
real
word
and
so
on,
but
he
did
things
like
green
eggs
and
ham.
Sam-I-Am
hop
on
pop
one
fish,
two
fish
red
fish,
blue
fish,
and
then
this
is
the
next
one
and
I
know
this
from
the
kids:
black
fish,
blue
fish
old
fish
new
fish.
B
So
there
are
rhymes
in
there
and
there
are
words
that
sound
the
same.
Those
are
games.
You
can
even
play
with
your
kids
later
on.
You
could
say
which
of
these
words
sound
alike,
was
it
new
and
old,
or
was
it
new
and
blue?
So
he
was
a
perfect
example
of
that.
Yes,
he
was
the
master
master
master
and
rhyme
and
the
kids
don't
realize
that
they're
learning,
ending
sounds
and
beginning
sounds
and
so
on
so
I
brought
hickory
dickory
dock
because
it's
got
rhyme
hickory
dickory
dock.
B
The
mouse
ran
up
the
clock,
but
if
you
think
of
that
Hickory
Hickory
three
different
sounds
and
the
kids
that
they
can
learn
I
think
it's
always
funny
to
hear
children
pronounce
long
words,
because
they
think
it's
something
totally
different
than
what
it
really
is,
but
eventually,
hopefully
don't
get
to
it.
Didn't
I
realize
that
this
is
a
word
that
relates
to
something
on
the
page
and
it's
hip
Korie
and
you.
B
B
B
B
A
B
B
Should
play
music
at
home
once
in
a
while,
though,
you
know,
I'm,
not
saying
hard
rock
and
all
that
stuff,
but
I
think
it's
important
to
play
music
for
your
kids.
We
have
a
lot
of
great
CDs
that
have
dancing
and
rhythm
sticks
and
so
on.
There's
a
lot
of
action.
Rhymes
I
can't
help
bring
up
your
toe
knee
chest,
nut,
miss
Jerry's,
favorite
song
and
toddler
time,
but
it's
wonderful
because
it's
got
all
the
actions
large
and
small
motor
skills
that
go
along
and
they
learn
to
sing
and
eventually
they'll.
B
A
B
B
Raisin
and
I'll
get
to
it
yeah,
so
one
of
the
other
things
I
want
to
mention.
I've
got
a
this
new
one
show
this
book
twinkle
twinkle
little
star.
We
have
some
great
books
here
where
you
can
actually
sing
the
book
and,
of
course
this
is
a
song
twinkle
twinkle
little
star.
There
are
the
books.
If
you
don't
really
want
to
just
read
them,
there's
nothing
wrong
with
singing
it.
A
B
B
A
So
singing
and
phonological
awareness
and
reading
all
really
tie
themselves
together,
as
you
can
see
with
our
poster,
we've
got
it.
It
doesn't
matter
if
it's
early
literacy
or
if
it's
school
age,
it's
important
all
through
our
lives.
Phonological
awareness
is
something
that
we
can
listen
to
and
learn
throughout
our
lives
and
practice.