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4Reading
for Readiness
Parent Spot for Parents of Pre-School Students
There are some very basic ingredients for growing healthy young
children-they need loving, nurturing families, wholesome food to
eat, time to rest and recharge their batteries and plentiful
opportunities to stretch, wiggle, run and safely explore their
worlds. But, did you know that reading and other
language-building activities are equally important to young
children's development?
During the
early years, children's brains, as well as bodies, grow at a
fast-paced rate. From birth through the early elementary years,
children develop many of the basic skills needed to read, write
and speak. These are skills they will need to succeed once they
enter primary school (kindergarten, first and second grade) and
throughout their lives. Research shows that one of the most
significant predictors of future school success is whether
parents and caretakers read to their young children.
Unfortunately, with dinner to make and dance class looming,
reading books together is sometimes a forgotten activity-the
televised version of Angelina Ballerina often wins out over the
picture books that inspired it.
Read
all about it: Ways to incorporate reading at home
Despite the
importance of reading for healthy development, many parents are
uncertain how to introduce books to their children. According to
Patricia Myers, executive director of the New York State
Association for the Education of Young Children (NYSAEYC), it's
really very simple.
"With
all of the information out there about the importance of
reading, lots of parents have the mistaken impression that their
job is to teach their young children to read," says Myers.
"Really, their job is simply to introduce books and help
their children become familiar and comfortable with them."
Myers says
that the time for formal teaching can wait. With young children
the most important thing that parents can do is to create an
atmosphere at home that supports learning and exploration of
language.
Here are
some simple ways to have meaningful reading experiences with
your young children:
-
Introduce
books to your baby from birth. Though they are too young to
grasp a story line, babies learn a lot about the comfort of
reading through the closeness of your body and the soothing,
rhythmic sound of your voice as you read aloud. Since most
babies prefer to use books as teething toys, make sure the
ones you choose are made from sturdy, safe (no small parts
or sharp corners), non-toxic cardboard or cloth. Appropriate
books for the very young are those that include colorful,
easy-to-understand pictures. Babies are fascinated by books
with faces and photographs of children like themselves
involved in day-to-day activities.
-
Help
children understand that reading is fun. How you read to
young children is as important as what you read. If you rush
through or drone along, children will likely lose interest.
Choose a time to read together when everyone is relaxed. Try
reading with expression, use different voices for the
characters or put yourself and your children into the story.
-
Tap into
children's interests. If your child loves construction
vehicles, choose books that include lots of colorful
pictures of diggers and haulers and a text that allows for
some expressive reading and sound effects ("The back
hoe BEEPS as it backs up. The excavator digs down DEEP to
scoop the earth.") At the library or bookstore, let
your children help decide which books to bring home. Though
they may not all be ones you would choose, allowing your
children freedom to pick what interests them (or merely
catches their eyes), can further spark excitement about
books and reading.
-
Look for
those that include beautiful, colorful illustrations and
inspired story lines. These are truly more enriching than
those that offer nothing more than an indirect advertisement
for trendy characters. For some suggestions of wonderful
books for young children, check out the
New York Public
Library's list of 100 Picture Books Everyone Should Know.
-
Make
reading a regular part of each day. If it works well for
your family, bedtime can be a great time to wind down with a
book or two. Mealtimes can also be prime reading times.
Today Is Monday by Eric Carle and The Seven Silly Eaters by
Mary Ann Hoberman are some fun books about food. Read to
your little ones as they splash in the tub. Some bathtime
books to try include The Tub People by Pam Conrad and Splish,
Splash! by Sarah Weeks.
-
Set aside
a special place for your children's books. A bottom
bookshelf or basket placed on the floor are great places to
store books from the family collection and those from the
library so that children can easily reach them.
-
Take your
children to library story hours. Even if they aren't able to
sit through an entire program, young children will learn a
lot about books and reading as they wander through the
stacks, play with puzzles and talk with the friendly
children's librarian.
-
Pack a
bag of books and keep it in your car. If you have to wait at
the doctor's office or have some spare time before a lesson,
read together from your pre-packed stash of books.
-
Record
your children's favorite stories on cassette tapes to play
in the car when you aren't able to read them yourself.
Popular children's books with tapes of pre-recorded readings
are readily available at the local library. A recorded
reading made by an out-of-town grandparent or other family
member given with a copy of the book makes a great birthday
or holiday gift.
The write
stuff
Writing is
another important language skill that begins to develop during
the early years. Though their first attempts at writing may be
difficult to distinguish - squiggles, dashes and loopy o's are
all first attempts at writing - as children's writing develops,
it will contain more conventional letters and spacing.
Just like
reading, learning to write is a natural, long-term process. Here
are some ways to encourage young children as they try their
hands at writing during the early years:
Offer lots of
materials for writing. Some obvious choices include an
assortment of paper and note pads plus crayons, chunky pencils
and washable markers. Gather these materials together and store
them where children can have ready access to them. That low
shelf or basket that contains their books is one possibility.
Since their gross and fine motor skills are still developing,
young children are sometimes more comfortable writing on large
surfaces like chalkboards and oversized pads of paper. Little
fingers can have greater success grasping sidewalk chalk or
painting with broad brushes filled with paint than they might
have with pencils or even crayons. Another great way to develop
writing skills is to build children's finger muscles through
play with scissors or Playdough.
Get a feel
for letters. Use sticks to form letters in the dirt, shape them
from bread dough, practice writing them on cookie trays covered
with cornmeal or pudding - edible writing materials are a great
incentive!
Suggest
opportunities to practice writing. Children can write and
illustrate a book about themselves. Blank books are easily made
by folding a few sheets of paper down the middle or binding a
packet of papers along the long side with yarn or O-rings.
Before heading out to the store, encourage children to write or
draw pictures of items to look for as you shop.
Encourage all
of their efforts. Throughout the preschool years, children use a
combination of scribbling, drawing, individual letters and/or
strings of letters to represent letters and words. All of this
is writing in its most basic form. Children are usually very
proud of their early attempts at writing. Your enthusiastic
response to whatever they offer can encourage them to keep
trying to hone their skills.
For permission to
reprint this article, please contact the Capital Region BOCES
Communications Service by e-mailing
dbushsuf@gw.neric.org.
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