New Release – התחלת תהלים Student Workbook

התחלת תהלים – שיר המעלות

התחלת תהילים

This book has just been released on the request of many schools who asked for guidance who to train students to begin reading complete texts like סידור and תהלים.

Reading texts is a new level of skill and not only a result of reading syllables, words, and כללים.

There can be a new difficulty associated with this level of kriah based on the facts that they now have a lot on a page, a combination of many different words of different levels of complexity and with different כללים that they have to process them all at the same time.

In addition, once the students find many familiar words within the text they are reading they can become compelled to begin reading based on word impression and leave what they were trained to always read based on the אותיות and נקודות and by the כללים.

The purpose of this book is to begin text reading in a guided framework that will teach the students a healthy way of reading texts from one end going up in skill level of reading and at the same time maintaining the focus to the previously acquired skills in kriah.

Will my child struggle to read?

With the summer days in and the school days out, where kids have finished their yearly curriculum, different thoughts circle in different parents’ minds. Some parents thank Hashem for their child’s success despite this year’s situation which has diminished lots of quality school hours, while others are very concerned about their child’s future.

What concerned parents say:

“My daughter learned the א-ב but has not yet managed to fully grasp it before the virus kicked in, and since then she is struggling with the אותיות. Soon Pre 1-A will start, and before I know it my daughter will remain the weak kriah students who will need tutors for who knows how many years…”

“My son learned how to read; he was ב”ה reading accurately but slowly. Now after the virus, his class has already mastered reading תהלים, and he still thinks about every אות and נקודה before saying each word. Soon he’ll be starting כתה ב’. How will he be able to learn חומש and recognize words?!”

As a parent reading this article, many of you might have similar concerns and fears about your son’s or daughter’s הצלחה with their קריאה skills. As we are working with מוסדות on their kriah curriculum, we can tell you that these concerns are valid, and yes! you have what to be concerned about. It can take all of a couple of weeks for the concern – the challenge to become an obstacle and a real problem.

The good news is that ‘it doesn’t take a village to raise a child.’ ‘An ounce of prevention is worth more than a pound of cure’- assisting your child in a productive way while there’s only a fear of failure can eliminate hours and hours of tutoring when the concern grows into a problem.

Following is a list of principles for kriah success:

  1. Kriah is a step by step process; the better your child will be with each step, the easier he/she will acquire each new step.
  2. Children prefer reading texts of levels that they’re fluent with rather than new levels.
  3. Learning with a parent should be a positive experience for a child; how positive can the experience be if he’s constantly getting criticism for reading words incorrectly?
  4. Kids want to read well! If something was said incorrectly it’s not because of their bad will.
  5. Success in each level of kriah is dependent on specific skills; practicing activities that strengthen those skills will increase reading success.
  6. A human brain adapts new skills with less practice more frequently, rather than more practice less frequently.

With those principles in mind, choosing targeted exciting activities that strengthen kriah skills and doing it with your child on a consistent basis for only 10 min. per day throughout the summer, will on your child’s be a tremendous benefit for your child’s future success!

We have produced a variety of exciting kriah workbooks geared for each level of kriah. It’s a great opportunity to practice, upgrade and maintain your child’s reading and get them ready for the upcoming school year. For more information call the Toras Picho office at 845-538-4168


Kriah Activity Book – Volume 1

Geared for review of alef-beis (And first two nekudos Kometz and Pasach). The worksheets address the following skills:

  • Letter recognition
  • Visual Perception
  • Phonemic Awareness and Phonics
  • Alef-Beis Fluency

Kriah Activity Book – Volume 2

Geared for review of open syllables and words of such syllables. The worksheets address the following skills:

  • Awareness of Alef-Beis within words
  • Awareness of Nekudos within words
  • Awareness of syllables within words
  • Connecting reading to language
  • Reading fluency
  • And more…

Kriah Activity Book – Volume 3

Geared for review of open syllables and words of such syllables. The worksheets address the following skills:

  • Awareness of Alef-Beis within words
  • Awareness of Nekudos within words
  • Awareness of syllables within words
  • Review of the basic shva rules
  • Review of the chasidish kumatz rules
  • Review of pasach genuva rules
  • Review of shin/sin
  • Review of דגש ורפה אותיות
  • Connecting reading to language
  • Reading fluency
  • And a lot more…


Kriah Workbook

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Chazoroh Book

Sample Second Grade Chazoroh Booklet

Kriah Curriculum Remotely – Pause or Continue…?

In this ongoing debate of whether to continue learning or only do chazoroh, I’ve been hearing opinions to both ends. Today, I got feedback in writing, which I’d like to share with you below:

Rabbi Roitenbarg from Gateshead, who coaches multiple schools with their kriah curriculum needs, reported in this email a 90% success rate for the classes who’ve continued with the kriah curriculum via phone conferences/ recordings. (Without Zoom – Audio Only)

Some teachers’ fears of students’ lacking interest or engagement for ‘phone learning’ are merely obstacles causing them to refrain from teaching new material. It is truly a concern, and there’s no question whether we will have the same amount of participation with remote learning; especially when done through audio only.

On the counterpart, we have to remember that we can’t spoil the good for the perfect; still we can aim high by thorough lesson planning to create short, yet powerful lessons that will captivate the students’ interest and engagement.

Yes, there is a fear of some children lagging behind, however, in exchange, a lot more fall behind when we don’t continue teaching new material. At the same time, those who have continued teaching new materials are reporting high levels of success with the students’ abilities in the those areas.

To conclude, it is our recommendation that the kriah curriculum continues throughout these times and that the curriculum objectives for each grade should be met at the end of this school year. This year’s remote learning is anytime more effective than the next year’s teacher’s live lessons, due to the teacher’s unfamiliarity of the content.

I’d love to hear your feedback! Please share your experiences advancing in your curriculum by commenting on this post.

A Freilichen Yom Tov!

COVID-19 Long Term Effect

Brave Mechanchim areFighting the Long Term Corona Effect

“Well, I did not grow up going to school like you did” That’s what my grandfather told me in a conversation when I met him recently.

Think about it, the WWII is b”h over, still, they missed their cheder years forever.

Corona Virus drama and physical danger will bez”h be over one day (hopefully sooner than later), will it affect our students ability to read forever?

Now is their chance to attend kita alef, pre 1A or whatever grade they are, no 2nd chance, we can choose to stay focused and realize that it’s their only chance or we can get distracted through the media fares and panic. When the virus will be gone will our students prime time of learning how to read also be gone?

Let’s fight the long term effect of the corona drama and virus. Let’s stay focused! As long a school is open, let’s focus on continuing with our curriculum objectives and leave the fears outside school buildings!

Pre-Writing Skills Workbook

Scribble To Script – Yiddish

This unique workbook, intended for children aged 4-5, includes work pages for writing readiness, by drawing circles to complete various tasks.

The goal of the workbook is enabling and strengthening in-hand manipulation, and creating control and limits as preparation for good and correct handwriting.

The workbook is constructed using a unique method of drawing circles that progresses gradually. Beginning with simple, formless circles, up until the creation of a result that is significant to the child, including circles in different sizes and places, so the child will gain satisfaction from what he has drawn and acquire writing skills in the optimal fashion.

The circle drawing process is gradual, experiential, colorful, and spectacular, and includes beautiful pictures that create an exceptionally pleasurable learning experience. We hope you will enjoy the book.

Scribble To Script – Yiddish

2020 Kriah Tutoring Course

We are pleased to inform you that due to popular demand we are, Be”H, once again offering a Kriah Course for Tutors By Rabbi Dovid Unger Shlit”a.

The course is intended for those who teach kriah to students who have learning difficulties and can benefit from private help to help them succeed.

Throughout the Kriah workshop, you will gain the necessary knowledge, skills and tools to help you in your objective of teaching your students Kriah and get a better understanding of children’s reading struggles and how to help them.

New: The Kriah Tracking Project

We are here to introduce you to the Kriah Tracking Project.

In the past few years, we’ve been asked by many principals to collect and share kriah testing results from across the schools who are using our curriculum to help with implementation and setting reasonable goals. After months of work we are able to pull this off by starting our new Kriah Tracking Project

The Kriah Tracking Project is a year round program to track progress of students who are in the process of learning how to read. The purpose of this project is to give us a deeper insight on understanding the process and help coaches and teachers make more informed decision for better student outcome.

The project is divided in phases as per the curriculum setup with the initial phase starting immediately collection data for חודש כסלו testing.

The practical steps are as follows:

  1. Trained coaches do testing in the schools as per the training given to them earlier this month.
  2. Testing data is being submitted by the coach through an online test results submission form.
  3. Report and analysis is shared with coaches and participating schools.

We invite all schools using our curriculum in any of the grades to participate in the initiative as this will help us learn and discover new insides over how kids learn to read.

Should you have any questions, please submit your information through the form below and someone of our team will reach out to you.

The Principal’s Role in Curriculum Implementation

Teachers and curriculum coaches often express the vital role principals and other school leaders have on curriculum implementation, in this article with share some reasons why it is that way.

Teachers and coaches who feel that the principal is into the curriculum together are subject to more robust implementation.

When a school implements a new curriculum, much support comes from the passion that leaders conveyed about the learning the school is undertaking. The preparation meetings that are arranged, the teamwork and the support the faculty gets plays a key role in the implementation process.

  • It is important that the principal addresses teachers’ anxiety about the change, and assures that they would work together and that continuous improvement mattered, not perfection. Lowering the cost of making mistakes and providing safe spaces for teachers to experiment, creates an environment in which teachers are relaxed and express openness to learning new ways of instruction.
  • Principals should act as the ‘lead learner’ rather than the ‘lead evaluator’, checking in and out the classroom for the purpose of learning and growing themselves as to how teachers are doing. Teachers will appreciate and praise such visits and the message they will get is “I’m too spending time to learn about this new curriculum and teaching directives”.