The Girl's Own BookMain MenuEllery Yale WoodABCsPrimersEducational TextsVirtue and ViceMethods of IllustrationFairy TalesFolk TalesDoll BooksSchool StoriesPeriodicals and Magazines for ChildrenDomestic SkillsNonsense BooksBooks to EntertainToy and Movable BooksDerivative and Transformative WorksBeyond the Nineteenth-Century Girl ReaderThanks and AcknowledgementsMarianne Hansene5c1491b9c20d37a95fc0356366eeb2ddecf682bFor questions or assistance with accessing content on this site, please write to Marianne Hansen.
P red 130
1media/P_red 130_thumb.jpg2020-08-11T19:04:28+00:00Marianne Hansene5c1491b9c20d37a95fc0356366eeb2ddecf682b182Initial P for Primersplain2020-08-24T18:41:20+00:00Marianne Hansene5c1491b9c20d37a95fc0356366eeb2ddecf682b
This page is referenced by:
12020-04-27T18:12:40+00:00Primers19plain2020-08-25T16:51:59+00:00rimers embodied a variety of ideas about how children learn to read. The most prevalent theories identified letter, sound, syllable, or word as the basic unit of understanding. From these elements, theorists and authors built up pedagogical structures of increasing complexity. The emphasis on introducing the young child to education and society makes primers valuable resources for the study of childhood itself. Although the three- and four-letter words in the earliest readers are familiar to us, the nineteenth-century child’s world is revealed as more difficult and dangerous than our own.
Many primers contained instructions for parents; more advanced books were designed for use in formal instruction. The Child’s Primer begins: “Direct the child’s attention to the cut, and explain its parts and use. Exhibit, in the next place, the word representing the name of the object, and require the child to repeat the letters.”
Mrs. Teachwell's Spelling Book gives advice on how to move from lesson to lesson. The Juvenile Grammar includes questions and exercises for the inexperienced teacher. Stories, of course, are the reward for all the hard work of learning to read. Ellenor Fenn, who published more than twenty story books and reading texts under the pen names Mrs. Lovechild and Mrs.Teachwell, favored increasing word length as reading skills increased, as she does here in Cobwebs to Catch Flies. Other books, like Little Mary and Her Cat, divided words into their component syllables to make them more accessible.