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8 Ways Parents Can Promote Reading At Home
As a parent,
you are your child's first - and most important - teacher. Here
are eight ways you can help your child become a better reader.
1. Read yourself.
Your actions really do speak louder than your words. When your kids
see you reading the newspaper or curling up with a book, they will
want to follow your example.
2. Make sure
your children read every day. Reading - like shooting baskets and
playing the piano - is a skill. Like other skills, it gets better
with practice. Researchers have found that children who spend at
least 30 minutes a day reading for fun - whether they read books,
newspapers, or magazines - develop the skills to be better readers
at school.
3. Get the library
habit. Make sure everyone in your family has a library card. Schedule
regular trips to the library. While you are there, check out a book
yourself!
4. Read aloud
to the children. In *The Read Aloud Handbook*, Jim Trelease reports
on research showing that this is the most important thing parents
can do to help their children become better readers. Here are some
tips from the book:
Start reading
to your children when they are young. It is never too early to begin
reading to your children, according to Trelease.
Don't stop reading
to your children as they grow older. You will both enjoy the chance
to do something together.
Set aside some
time each day for reading aloud. Even 10 minutes a day can have
a big impact. Bedtime is a natural reading aloud time. Other busy
families read aloud at breakfast or just after dinner.
Read books you
enjoy. Your kids will know if you are faking it.
5. Here is a way to use your newspaper to encourage reading: a scavenger
hunt. Give your child a list of things to find in today's newspaper.
Here are some ideas:
A map of your
country.
A picture of your child's favorite athlete.
The temperature in the city where a family member lives.
Three words that begin with "w".
A movie that is playing at a nearby theater.
6. Give books as gifts. Then find a special place for your children
to keep their own library.
7. Make reading
a privilege. Say, "You can stay up 15 minutes later tonight
if you read in bed." Or you might say, "Because you helped
with the dishes, I have time to read you an extra story."
8. If you are
not a good reader, you can still encourage your children. As your
children learn to read, ask them to read to you. Talk about the
books your children have read. Ask a friend or relative to read
aloud to your children.
Reprinted with permission from the National Network for Child Care
- NNCC. (1993). Eight ways parents can promote reading at home.
In M. Lopes (Ed.) CareGiver News (April, insert). Amherst, MA: University
of Massachusetts Cooperative Extension.

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