What better gift can we give our children than a love of reading?
Teaching children to read is one thing; encouraging them to want to read is another.
Obviously very young children can’t read themselves, so reading to them each day
is such an important first step. Why?
It gets them thinking creatively, sets reading up as an enjoyable activity, gives
children an appreciation and respect for books, promotes language and vocabulary
development, and allows for lots of great family time. Nothing beats a cuddle on
the lounge or on a huge bean bag with your child while you read a book together.
When we read to children we:
- Answer children’s questions.
- Promote language skills
- Promote reading skills
- Develop longer attention spans
- Strengthen family relationships
Even if you don’t have a lot of time, and let’s be honest a lot of us don’t, you
can still encourage your child to read by making up stories to go with picture books
with no words or attending a regular storytelling time. Most libraries offer this
on a regular basis.
It’s never too early to start!
Children’s brains begin to develop from the moment they emerge from the womb. Newborns
respond to bright pictures, the rhythm of words and the comfort of a parent speaking
to them. As parents, the voice we use when we read to children is different to our
normal speaking voice which is something they really respond to.
The foundations that determine how clever, creative and imaginative a child will
be are largely laid down by the time a child turns one. It’s incredible but true:
at this age, most children have learnt all the sounds that make up the spoken language.
By the age of two, children have a vocabulary of around 50 words.
Research has shown that language is acquired most rapidly in the first five years
of life. What better way to teach language than to read to your children?
Reading aloud to children will develop their speaking skills and help them to make
connections – the look of words, the way they work in sentences, how the word functions.
Books can help children to learn to concentrate, to explore their inner feelings,
to express themselves and to resolve conflicts.
Recent studies have shown that there is a direct relationship between literacy success
and success within the wider world. Even self-esteem has been linked to the ability
to read and write. Don’t underestimate the power of books.
Don’t worry if you don’t have any children’s books at home, a young baby will love
hearing you read from the newspaper or your favourite novel as long as you make
it sound good to them. Play up the animation and use your best acting skills – they’ll
love it.
The experts say that children need 1,000 stories read to them before they begin
to learn to read for themselves. Sounds like a lot? It’s just three stories a day
over a year.