With every touch of the Tag Reader, words talk, pictures sing and stories live out loud!
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Tag Activity Storybook Kung Fu Panda: Po's Tasty Training
Read the story and cheer for Po as he eats and trains to become a Kung Fu Panda! But will Master Shifu be able to transform Po into an awesome kung fu master?

After the story, play leveled learning activities that help build phonics skills, vocabulary and reading comprehension.
Plus, connect the Tag Reader online to the LeapFrog Learning Path to see what your child is learning.
Tag books work with the Tag Reader (sold separately) to bring books to life like never before. As children touch the Tag Reader to the pages of this specially printed activity storybook, a small camera in the tip "reads" the pages, enabling children to hear words and stories read aloud. Characters, pictures and learning activities spring to life with every touch, immersing children in the thrill of reading. |
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Well-loved characters and engaging Stories TAG books are created to foster a love of stories and encourage children on their reading journey.
Each TAG book includes an engaging story with loveable characters and features that are designed to support your child’s growing reading skills.
Your child can touch the Read the Story button to hear the entire book read aloud, or touch the Read the Page button to set the pace and read along one page at a time.
If your child is reading independently but still wants a little help, your child can touch individual words to hear them read aloud. Reading comprehension games help engage your child throughout the story, encouraging your child to think about what has just been read. |
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Fun Learning Games and Activities Each TAG Activity Storybook comes packed with fun games and activities created to help your child build vocabulary, decode words and learn other core reading skills.
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What`s this book teaching?
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Reading comprehension
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As children build reading and vocabulary skills, they begin to construct meaning from text. Eventually, they learn to apply critical skills to make inferences and draw conclusions.
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Vocabulary
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Infants and toddlers learn vocabulary by memory. Later, children use word structure and context to help understand the meaning of a word. They identify synonyms and antonyms. They use prefixes, suffixes and base words to build their own vocabulary.
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Book basics
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A child's early experiences with books greatly influence his ability to learn to read. Even before he knows his ABCs, you can teach him how to handle a book and spark his interest in stories.
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Phonics skills
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To learn to read, a child must understand the letter-sound relationship and distinguish individual sounds, or phonemes, within words. Crucial to reading, phonics skills help children sound out new words (If I can read "pot," then I can read "hot" and "spot").
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Alphabetical order
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While many children can sing the alphabet song, the ability to sequence letters in order signals the understanding of letters as individual units of language.
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Word recognition
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As children learn to read, they must be able to "decode" the words they don't know - to translate strings of letters into words. Eventually they can recognize common words that can't be sounded out (the, said, of).
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Spelling
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Children first learn to spell by breaking down words into sounds. But many sounds in our language have irregular spellings. Children must learn the fundamental spelling rules and recognize commonly misspelled words.
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