Oral Language
Discuss what you read and see. Ask your child what he sees as you read the story, especially the items buried in the ground. Discuss how these items may have arrived there. Some of these items may be very unusual or silly, which make them even more fun to point out and talk about.
Phonological Awareness
Rhyme is present throughout the story; the last words of alternating lines share the same ending sounds. Some rhyming words in the story are mind/kind, growling/howling, nose/rose and head/said. Talk to your child about how these words rhyme or sound alike. Repeat the words and emphasize the shared sounds. When you read and encounter other rhyming words, point those out to your child and ask him to make the sound that the words share. Once your child knows what it means for words to rhyme, ask him if he knows other words that share the same sound. For example, cat and sat both share the sound –at; some words that rhyme with cat and sat are bat, mat and hat.