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Experts > Families
Mothering
By Heart
Children are made readers
on the laps of their parents.
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With
the abundance of computer games and Playstations, cartoons
and TV shows, it may sound like an impossible dream
to raise a reader today, but it's not an overwhelming
task. A love of reading is a great legacy to pass on
to your kids.
Here
are some ways to get your kids turned on to books—even
if they're "reluctant readers":
Whatever
your child is interested in, connect it with reading.
Reading is vital to your child's learning—and can
be lots of fun if you tap into kids' center of learning
excitement (that means the subject or topic they want
to learn about more than anything else). This is the
#1 way to get kids into books and reading. If your
child loves sports, get some books on soccer, basketball,
or his favorite sport or sports hero. If she is fascinated
with whales or clouds and storms, there are great
books on that. Ballerinas, World War II history, insects,
dinosaurs, and more—the sky's the limit on what you
can find in books.
Take
advantage of your local public library. You can
check out wonderful children's books, educational
games, kids' books on tape, and lots more for free
(just return them on time!). Make the children's room
of the local library your second home. Get to know
the librarians and they can help your kids find interesting
books. You can even reserve books from home on the
Internet, a timesaver if you have an infant.
If
you go to the library every two weeks and get a big
stack of books, you can deposit them in baskets in
obvious places (by the couch, by your child's bed,
etc.)—don't put the books "out of sight" or they'll
be "out of mind."
Play
games that include reading, like "Boggle," "Password,"
"Go to the Head of the Class," "Candyland," "Scrabble
Junior," and others.
Take
your child to a local bookstore to spend her birthday
or Christmas money on the purchase of a book by a favorite
author instead of a new electronic toy.
Install
a clip-light next to your child's bed or provide
a bedside lamp and interesting books. Then give her
a little extra time to stay up—if she's reading. (Even
15 minutes a day will add up to a lot of silent reading!)
Cuddle
up with your kids and a book. Reading aloud as
a family is one of the best ways to encourage your
children's reading and produces priceless memories,
especially chapter books where they have to wait till
the next night for the next episode. When it's cold
outside, get one of the Chronicles of Narnia series
books by C.S. Lewis, an E.B. White book like Charlotte's
Web, or Little House on the Prairie, by
Laura Ingalls Wilder, snuggle up and read.
Every
season brings a reason to share reading as a family
and boost your child's love of books—reading aloud by
the fireplace, reading while traveling, perusing magazines
while recovering from a cold or flu, reading recipes
together while baking cookies—whatever the time or place,
raising readers is a great privilege and responsibility
we have as parents!
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Copyright
2004 Cheri Fuller, adapted from The Mom You're Meant to
Be: Loving Your Kids While Leaning on God (Focus on the
Family). To be used only with permission of author. To request
reprint permission, please contact Cheri at Cheri@CheriFuller.com.
© 2002 Cheri Fuller.
Cheri Fuller is a mother of three grown children and a Gold Medallion
award winning author and speaker. Check out Cheri's books Opening
Your Child's Nine Learning Windows and 365
ways to Help Your Child Learn & Achieve featured at her
site www.cherifuller.com.
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