Glenn Doman, How to Teach Your Baby To Read: A special word from the authors regarding third edition

Quote From the 3rd edition of the Book*:

A special word from the authors regarding this third edition This book first saw the light of day in 1964. It was the very beginning of the Gentle Revolution. Pioneering mothers and fathers embraced the book. Those first parents recognized that this was a real adventure. While Man was just venturing into outer space our parents took the very first steps into inner space-the vast and quite miraculous world of brain growth and development of the tiny child. Those parents knew that tiny children were a great deal more intelligent than most people thought they were. They rolled up their sleeves and got started, and what a wonderful job they have done. Since that time five million copies have been sold in twenty-two languages, with more on the way. All of the things we said in that original edition seem to be as true today as they were forty years ago. Only one thing has changed. Today there are tens of thousands of children, ranging from babies to adults, who learned to read at an early age using this book. As a result, thousands and thousands of mothers have written to us to tell us of the pleasure, joy, and excitement they have experienced in teaching their babies to read. They have related their experiences, their exultation, and occasional frustrations. They have described their victories and their innovations. They have asked a great many penetrating questions. These letters contain a treasure trove of priceless knowledge and splendid insight into tiny children. They also constitute the greatest body of evidence in the history of the world that proves be�yond question that tiny children can learn to read, should learn to read, are learning to read, and, most important of all, what happens to them when they go to school and when they grow up. This precious body of knowledge is what made this new edition not only important but vital to the new generation of parents who have their children's lives as a top priority. Chapter 7 is changed substantially from the original book-not to change any of the principles laid out earlier, but rather to fine- tune them in light of the vast experience that parents from around the world have had in following these principles. Chapter 8 is entirely new from the original and details a precise approach to starting a child at each of the significant ages: newborn, infant, tiny baby, baby, and little child. Chapter 9 is also entirely new and answers the two most commonly asked questions about teaching babies to read: 1. "What happens to them when they go to school?" 2. "What happens to them when they grow up. Here are the answers to these questions from the parents themselves. They do not deal with theoretical children with theoretical problems (so beloved of professionals)-they deal with very real opportunities afforded to very real children by very real and splendid parents. For the new parent about to join this gentle revolution, welcome. Go joyously, go like the wind, and enjoy every minute with your child.

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*Special thanks to Laurie Tiemens for posting this information in the files of the TeachYourBabyToRead yahoo group.

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