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2007-02-19 04:20:47 · 11 answers · asked by zoobyzoo 1 in Education & Reference Teaching

11 answers

Well I don't have children of my own but I can tell you how my mother got me more interested in reading. :)

First she read with me a *lot* and she made sure she always sounded excited about both reading and spending time with me, which is important because enthusiasm is catching. Since I started to associate reading time with her as being something fun and exciting it made me look forward to it more.

I don't recall how old I was when she started doing this, but she started using the smaller words, things like cat and dog, to develop the concept of putting letters together makes a word - she choose one word at a time each time we were reading and she'd point her finger at each letter and say the letter out loud, then sound out the word. After two or three times she would say 'I can't remember what letter this is, do you know?' and I would tell her whatever letter it was, for the whole word. She made it very silly by giggling and saying things like "oh that's right, now I remember that's the letter C.. but what do those letters mean?" so that I would tell her "c-a-t is cat". It was adorably goofy in a way, but because it appealed to a childs innate desire to be helpful it actually really helped out. Later when I was reading more easily she still read with me but she would let me read the dialog sentences in different voices, which made it much more fun - the fact that we were still doing it together made it special too, because it was a way to spend time with Mom, so it filled multiple needs for me as a child.

Another thing she did was she took me to the library every week and she made it exciting, made it a big deal, so that I looked forward to it as if it were an adventure (which in a way it was). She took me to bookstores and let me pick books out (and she was subtle in guiding me towards books I could handle if I started reaching for things that would have been too difficult). She even took me to a comic book store and let me choose three or four comics that looked appealing just to me with the promise that so long as I was behaving well that each month when the new issue came out we would come back and get it - which helped foster looking eagerly forward to reading on an extended basis as well as helped with memory skills because the stories always went from one comic to the next.

I'm sure there are lots of other ways as well, those are just the ones I've experienced myself, and I have to tell you they worked pretty well - I'm a bookaholic now, it's true, I'm thoroughly addicted to reading. I have more books than anything else in my house combined. I think, in the end, the biggest keys are to make it exciting, make it interactive and to let the child help choose what's being read. Good luck, I hope things go well! :)

2007-02-19 05:48:24 · answer #1 · answered by JM 2 · 0 0

If the child can read a little, make sure they aren't choosing books above their reading level because this causes frustration. Also, read with them....like I will read the harder words and the child will read the words he knows. He feels like he's read the whole story, even though I did my share of the work. Don't forget to change your voice with different characters, or to show excitement or sadness, etc.

Find books that are really interesting to the child.......like my oldest likes sharks....we now have a huge collection of shark books. Even if he can't read all of the words, he can "picture walk" and make up a story that goes with the pictures.
As long as you can get the book in their hand, over half the battle is won!

Also, don't stress too much. Take it slow. Read 2-3 minutes at a time at first. Before you know you'll have an entire easy reader book read in one sitting.

2007-02-19 05:07:03 · answer #2 · answered by TinyDancer 2 · 1 0

People often want their kids to love reading. The thing is, to love reading you have to be good at it. To get good at it, you have to do it often. To do it often, you probably have to like it....
Its a cycle that feeds on itself.

How to get kids to read?

First of all, WHAT they read isnt as important as them actually reading. Get magazines, comics, cook books, internet sites, song lyrics, myspace blogs, whatever is interesting to your child.

2nd: Reading level is important. If your chlid can read on a 4th grade level, then they should regularly read on a 3rd grade level. I know that makes no sence, but you dont want your child frustrated all the time. Accelerated Reader (Reading Renessaince) has done study after study--feel free to check them out online.

3rd Getting them to actually read--also known as motivation:
BRIBERY WORKS:
unfortunately to most kids the TV, computer, XBox 360, phone, etc are more important to them than reading. So set up a simple "contract." 30 minutes of reading equals 30 minutes of their favorite activity. OR no TV, games, etc until a certain amount of reading is done. Or, you can ask an older child, that isnt necc a good reader, to read to a younger sibling. That way the books are less frustrated and the child learns about volunteering his/her time as well.

Good luck!!

2007-02-19 05:13:43 · answer #3 · answered by Jennifer Anne 4 · 0 0

First and foremost, read yourself and let your child see how much you enjoy reading. Set aside a time to read. My kids like to read before they go to bed. Also, my husband pays the kids a penny a page. That's a small bit of incentive and sort of fun.
That's all that I can think of.
Best wishes.

2007-02-19 04:30:19 · answer #4 · answered by winslow 3 · 1 0

Make a particular interpreting time. perhaps quite in the previous mattress time, anybody ( including you) can get on your pajamas. you are able to all have your e book and browse. in case you want more beneficial of an incentive, tell them that in the adventure that they study over 3 hours each and each and every week you are able to bypass and get an ice cream, pizza, see a movie, bypass to the park, or do somethng else tremendous relaxing. you are able to also say in the adventure that they study 3 hours per week for a month, they could get a sparkling recreation or some thing. A more beneficial extreme incentive will be to have a itemizing of 20 financial ruin books and in the adventure that they study each and every individual of them you are able to take them to disney land or a water park. yet another theory will be a e book club. Have them ask a number of their associates and their moms in the adventure that they prefer to go back over each and every 2 or weeks and characteristic a gathering. you are able to rotate internet hosting the club. at the same time as they are on the assembly, they could do a craft that is composed of the e book, and the internet hosting mom could have a e book appropriate snack. My mom and that i did this at one aspect, and we study the Magic tree domicile e book: holiday lower than the Volcano. all of us made tiny volcanoes and on the top we ate a significant chocolate volcano cake. It grow to be a ton of relaxing. solid success :)

2016-12-04 09:17:14 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Read books the kid can read whenever the kid is around you. It may be boring for you but, let me tell you, there is (to me) no memory in the world happier than that of my kid sitting my lap,when she was 3 years old, and reading, "What Do You Do With a Crazy Kangaroo?"

2007-02-23 02:20:37 · answer #6 · answered by Anpadh 6 · 0 0

start reading to them, then reading with them, then eventually have the child read to you. spending that alone time with a child when you are sharing a book is a good reinforcement.

2007-02-19 04:30:45 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

reading is much better the book retains u thinking and you simply get greater detail in what folks are thinking and you also get more imagination

2017-03-02 10:23:47 · answer #8 · answered by Kevin 3 · 0 0

Reading the booklet instead of seeing the movie is the ultimate way to see what the author expected. Reading uses your creativity, hones your reading skills, and can transform your life vocabulary

2017-02-03 04:53:45 · answer #9 · answered by Evan 4 · 0 0

don't force it. if the kid wants to read let the kid read. The important thing is that you must not make them think reading is a chore.

2007-02-19 04:53:41 · answer #10 · answered by Coyote81 3 · 0 0

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