Absolutely! You are doing great things for your child. Continue reading to her and you will be helping her language development, early literacy skills, encouraging a love of learning and fostering a strong bond between you and your child.
from childliteracy.com:
Reading to your child is the single most valuable thing you can do. Why?
* it gives experience of different types of language, rhythms and sounds
* research shows that pre-school children who are exposed to plenty of language (books and conversation) tend to do better at school
* it teaches about many topics which wouldn't come up in conversation
* it is a wonderful way to bond with your child
* it is very calming
2007-02-18 06:14:56
·
answer #1
·
answered by amom 3
·
2⤊
0⤋
I read to my daughter from a very young age, 8 months is getting close to speech. I believe it is beneficial.
I read to her every night until she was about 6. She was able to read by herself at the age of 3. Put her in kindergarten, then had to start again because she was getting bored in school.
Teachers did not know what to do with her as her reading skills surpassed anything they were doing. She ended up skipping grade 3 & 4. Does this prove anything? I don't know.
Neither of us can imagine a day without reading.
She graduated with degrees years ago.
2007-02-18 06:21:06
·
answer #2
·
answered by Pacifica 6
·
1⤊
0⤋
Reading to your daughter is great! It is the perfect way to spend time with her. I have found with my own kid, grandkids and others I have taken care of that reading does help expand the vocabulary.
They may not learn to read or talk sooner but, that is not the purpose of reading to a child. The purpose is to spend time with the child in a calm and soothing way. Reading does just that. Read to them as often as you can through the day.
The positive thing is that children who are read to on a regular basis grow up with a love for books. That is a good thing. A love for books opens a whole new world. It does expand the vocabulary and it does help with their own reading skills.
But most important it builds a great bond between you and your child. It is never to soon or too late to start reading to children.
2007-02-18 06:21:46
·
answer #3
·
answered by Mee-Maw 5
·
2⤊
0⤋
Oh gosh, yes! Reading helps them in so many ways - language, comprehension, listening, attention span, reading (down the road)... they are sponges at this age. You rock for reading to her, if for no other reason than the bonding that occurs for that 10 minutes each day.
2007-02-19 16:38:59
·
answer #4
·
answered by ~Biz~ 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
Yes that's real good. I was even told my daughter's doctor that it's good for the father to read to the baby because the mom is with the baby most of the day and some father's seem to feel left out and that's a good way to bond with you little one while their still young.
And yes it can help her with the way she talks. I was even told it helps them in the long run when they get to the age of starting school. So what your doing is a great thing for your little girl.
2007-02-18 06:28:27
·
answer #5
·
answered by T78 3
·
1⤊
0⤋
Definitely a very good thing. I read to my oldest daughter all the time and when the second came along (oldest was 5), I would read to both. My second daughter started reading at age four and my first daughter's memory skills were off the map. Keep it up and she will learn verbal, listening, and all kinds of other skills very early. Kudos mom!
2007-02-18 06:27:38
·
answer #6
·
answered by Anonymous
·
2⤊
0⤋
she feels like she's teething, or coming down with some thing... whilst they're below the climate they do no longer understand what they choose for, basically that some thing isn't staggering... :( it is so unfair that they are high quality with Daddy and disappointed around you, yet in addition prevalent... I wager in some days you would be conscious some thing and bypass, OH, thaaaat's what her problem replaced into... as long as you're looking after the properly known issues (does she choose for a transformation? Is she eating adequate? is she overtired? etc....) attempt to reassure your self that this, too, will bypass, and meanwhile attempt to get adequate of a destroy for your self whilst she's with Dad, and via the day in line with danger positioned her in the buggy and bypass on long walks or some thing the place the two considered one of you may zone out slightly... stable good fortune!!
2016-10-02 08:33:23
·
answer #7
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
It certainly will. Talking to her in any way, whether it's just you talking or if it's reading will help her learn to talk. I encourage you to continue reading to her as she gets older, it will help her to develop an interest in reading and make it much easier to teach her how to read as well. My parents read to me when I was little, and I remember seeing them read all the time. Because all little kids want to be just like Mommy and Daddy, I wanted to learn how to read really early in life and by the time I started Kindergarten I was reading (nothing to difficult, mostly Dick and Jane and Spot type of stuff, but still I was reading), and when my school did placement testing at the end of my 3rd grade year I scored at a college reading level.
2007-02-18 06:18:56
·
answer #8
·
answered by FlyChicc420 5
·
2⤊
0⤋
From my experience,yes it does. I read to my oldest daughter, from the time she was 6 months old. She started reading at 2.5yrs. and has now been tested and classified as exceptionally gifted. So yes, I do believe reading has ALOT to do with good academic outcomes. Good luck!
2007-02-18 07:05:38
·
answer #9
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
Absolutely!!! Reading is SO important for kids. My daughter is 18 months old and can say a TON of words (hard ones like "chocolate" for Pete's sake!), and I'm sure that it's because we read to her.
Just this morning she quoted "Go Dog Go" to me. I put a bowl on her head and said, "Here's your hat!" and she said, "Like my hat? Goodbye!" just like in the book. Too funny.
2007-02-18 06:16:22
·
answer #10
·
answered by Amy 3
·
0⤊
0⤋