Why Read to Your Kids? Here are 12 Important Reasons
"The single most important activity for building the knowledge required for eventual success in reading is reading aloud to children," a Commission on Reading report found.
In fact, reading is so important that a non-profit group called Read Aloud America is traveling to different schools to promote literacy, encourage a love of reading in adults and children, and increase children's prospects for success in school and life.
Not only will reading to your child help him develop language and listening skills, and a sense of curiosity, but it will help to strengthen the bond you share as well.
Their Read Aloud Program (RAP) brings together kids and families at host schools to stimulate their interest in reading, decrease television viewing, increase family time spent in reading activities, and connect the values of good books to everyday life. Although the program is currently only offered in Hawaii, you can gain the same benefits from reading to your kids at home.
Here are 12 of the key reasons to start (or continue) reading aloud to your kids today.
1. Build a lifelong interest in reading. "Getting kids actively involved in the process of reading, and having them interact with adults, is key to a lifelong interest in reading," said BeAnn Younker, principal at Battle Ground Middle School in Indiana.
2. Children whose parents read to them tend to become better readers and perform better in school, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.
3. Reading to kids helps them with language and speech development.
4. It expands kids' vocabulary and teaches children how to pronounce new words.
5. Reading to toddlers prepares them for school, during which they will need to listen to what is being said to them (similar to what they do while being read to).
6. Reading to older kids helps them understand grammar and correct sentence structure.
7. Kids and parents can use reading time as bonding time. It's an excellent opportunity for one-on-one communication, and it gives kids the attention they crave.
8. Being read to builds children's attention spans and helps them hone their listening skills.
9. Curiosity, creativity and imagination are all developed while being read to.
10. Being read to helps kids learn how to express themselves clearly and confidently.
11. Kids learn appropriate behavior when they're read to, and are exposed to new situations, making them more prepared when they encounter these situations in real life.
12. When read to, children are able to experience the rhythm and melody of language even before they can understand the spoken or printed word.
I found this article and confirms the importance of reading to your kids, grandkids, students, etc. I love it! I am enclosing the link also. Have fun reading!
Thursday, March 25, 2010
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What a wonderful article!! I wish I could pick a favorite among the 12 items listed, but they are all true! As an elementary librarian, I worked at a school that had a fair number of students that came from Mexico and knew very little English. Just listening in to the story and then talking with the student afterward (with a helper student to interpret!) was wonderful, and really helped me to make a connection that would have been lacking without story
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing! :)
Shawndy
I think point number 7 is very important. Kids want attention even if they don't say it. Just by reading to them you are giving that much needed attention. I also like number 8. I have taught study skills lessons at work and quite a few lessons cover just listening skills. Over time the more they listen the better they will get at paying attention when spoken too. Loved the rest of them too.
ReplyDeleteI couldn't agree more with this article. When my older sister was pregnant, she started reading to my unborn niece. Before Melissa, my niece, was two years old, I remember her sounding off store signs as we drove by, like Mc Donalds, Party City, and Home Depot. I just thought she recognized the logos images. Then one day, we drove past a Sherwin Williams (the paint store) and she read it off! I could not believe it! We had never been to that part of Escondido before, nor had there ever been a need of a Sherwin Williams, so no one had ever read it for her. She read it on her own! And she has not stopped reading. When she was like nine, she was able to power out the Harry Potter books in like three days! I loved baby sitting her because that was part of our bonding, we always read together before we went to sleep. She is 13 now, still loves to read and her favorite place to hang out is Border's.
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