Reading at Trinity

Trinity Reading lists by Grade can be found at the bottom of this article.


As you might expect, there is a heavy emphasis on literacy at Trinity. We want students reading as soon as they can and this typically happens around November of the Kindergarten year. As soon as students are literate, the begin to dive into the richest literature appropriate for their particular age group.


The 5 Stages of Reading  - Jean Chall
Jean Chall, world renowned reading expert and psychologist for fifty years, and past professor emeritus at Harvard University cites her five stages of reading development below:

Learning to read doesn't just happen. It has to be taught through systematic, organized instruction. Reading is a skill which is built upon through stages and is an ongoing process.

If a stage of reading development has not been learned, students will flounder in their reading ability, which also affects their writing skills. At Trinity we realize that it is imperative that our teachers make certain students fully understand each stage of the reading/writing process before they move on to the next level.

Stage 0: Pre-reading Stage:
Unsystematic accumulation of understandings about reading between pre-school and kindergarten.

Stage 1: Initial Reading or Decoding Stage (grades 1-2; Ages 6-7 )
Student's central task is learning arbitrary letters and associating them with corresponding parts of spoken words. Learner acquires knowledge about reading. Phonics.

Stage 2: Confirmation, Fluency, Ungluing from Print, Automaticity Stage (grades 2-3; Ages 7-8)
Consolidation of what was learned in Stage 1. Requires reading many easy and familiar books for developmental reading. Gradual increase in functional and recreational reading. Common use of the basal readers. Functional reading important - content area texts - here's where we fail in our attempts to prepare our students. Range of possible recreational reading increases.

Stage 3: Reading for Learning the New Stage: A First Step (Grades 4-8; ages 9-13)
Readers now progress from ‘learning to read’ to reading to learn. Readers need to bring prior knowledge to their reading. Children acquire facts.

Stage 4: Multiple Viewpoints Stage: (High School; Ages 14-18)
Should include instruction in reading/study skills, and reading strategies for success.

Stage 5: Construction & Reconstruction Stage: College ; Ages 18 & up)
Adult literacy should stress acquisition of skills useful to the participants and the ability to apply those skills. At this stage readers should be able to tackle anything that has been written from any era.

These are the stair steps of reading development. They are built upon and climbed at Trinity, as students grow in their literacy development.


Grammar School Reading Lists

Students read a great deal at Trinity and we emphasize the reading of excellent, timeless works. Click on the links below for a comprehensive list of what students are reading at each grade level.

In addition to the readings lists that we tackle during the school year, there are also recommendations for summer and recreational reading. You will see some overlap in the lists because books are typically appropriate for a range of ages.

Kindergarten Reading List
Our Kindergarten students begin their reading journey with a phonics based program including Phonics Museum readers and Primary Phonics Readers.

Most primer readers don't have much "meat" to them, but the Phonics Museum provides historical and biblical knowledge at the same time it is teaching reading skills. the Kindergarten program and cover topics such as Daniel and the Lion's Den, Greek mosiacs, Benjamin Franklin and the Civil War.

First Grade Reading List
Our First Graders continue with a solid phonetic program that uses historic and biblical material to teach reading. The first grade readers feature subjects such as Cyrus the Archer, Ella Fitzgerald, moon missions, the bubonic plague, Sir Galahad (the son of Sir Lancelot), and more.

Second Grade Reading List
Second Grade is a pivotal year form young readers and they delve into such classics as Sarah Plain and Tall by  Patricia
MacLachlan, The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams and selections by Laura Ingalls Wilder and Beverly Cleary.

Third Grade Reading List
During third grade most students progress from 'learning to read' to 'reading to learn'. They have the opportunity to explore such great texts as The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis, The Pilgrim’s Progress by Paul Bunyan and Trumpet of the Swan by E.B. White.

Fourth Grade Reading List
In fourth grade Trinity students are reading Voyage of the Dawn Treader by C.S. Lewis,  Paul Revere Boston Patriot by Augusta Stevenson and  My Side of the Mountain by Jean Craighead George.

Fifth Grade Reading List
You will find our fifth graders reading The Magician's Nephew by C.S. Lewis, Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt , Animal Farm by George Orwell and the Jungle Books by Rudyard Kipling.

Sixth Grade Reading List
The culmination of Grammar school studies has Trinity students reading some of the finest examples of literature in the Western cannon: Hamlet by William Shakespeare,  Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare, The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom, The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien, and The Man Who Would be King by Rudyard Kipling.

Complete Grammar School Reading List Grades K-6


Trinity Summer Reading Log